Press
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Jesse Milan Jr. Steps Down as Black AIDS Institute Chair
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 7 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Jesse Milan, Jr. steps
down after seven years serving as Board Chairman for the Black AIDS
Institute. Milan, replaced by incoming Chairman A. Cornelius Baker,
will continue to serve on the Institute Board as Chair Emeritus.
At
a recent Board meeting, Institute Board Members and CEO and Founder
Phill Wilson expressed heartfelt appreciation to Mr. Milan for his
tireless leadership on behalf of the Institute.
Milan
has spent most of his professional life in the AIDS struggle. He is
Vice President and Director of Community Health Systems at the Altarum
Institute and leads their efforts in HIV/AIDS and other health disparity
issues from its offices in Washington, DC. Prior to joining Altarum
in 2008, Milan spent 10 years at Constella Group/SRA International
where he served as Vice President of the Health Communications Division.
Upon his hiring, Milan served as project director for the National
Prevention Information Network (NPIN). During his tenure, he expanded
the project to cover HIV/AID, STDs, and TB. Later as Vice President
for Constella Group's Center for Global Health Convergence, Milan
managed Constella's Advisory Board, fostered public-private partnership
opportunities in the domestic and international arena, and served
as corporate philanthropy officer. He served for five years as co-chair
of the CDC/HRSA Advisory Committee on HIV and STD Prevention and Treatment,
at the appointment of the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services.
In 2009, he served as co-chair of the External Peer Review of the
CDC's Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention's $700 million domestic HIV/AIDS
prevention portfolio. The committee's report was presented last month
to the CDC's Board of Scientific Advisors. Milan also directed the
$21 million City of Philadelphia's Department of Public Health AIDS
office, and also served as Health Department co-chair of the Philadelphia
HIV Community Planning Group, Chair of the Philadelphia Ryan White
Title 1 Planning Council, and was President of three other nationally
recognized HIV/AIDS organizations.
Jesse
Milan, Jr. has graciously shared his 27 years of living with HIV experiences
through volunteerism, lectures, broadcast interviews and international
speaking tours, at the 2000 Democratic National Convention and earlier
this year at the White House to help launch the CDC's new Act Against
AIDS campaign. He leverages his secular resources and the public to
gain more secure footing in the crusade.
Milan
leaves people with HIV/AIDS with these thoughts, "Do not feel
alone, and know that there are people and organizations that are ready
and willing to embrace and help."
Founded
in May of 1999, the Black AIDS Institute is the only national HIV/AIDS
think tank focused exclusively on Black people. The Institute's Mission
is to stop the AIDS pandemic in Black communities by engaging and
mobilizing Black institutions and individuals in efforts to confront
HIV. The Institute interprets public and private sector HIV policies,
conducts trainings, offers technical assistance, disseminates information
and provides advocacy mobilization from a uniquely and unapologetically
Black point of view.
SOURCE Black AIDS Institute
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