lifestyle

The magazine cover printed in real, human blood.

Does the idea of holding a magazine printed in HIV-positive blood terrify you? You could be part of the problem.

A men’s magazine has printed its most recent issue with ink infused with HIV-positive blood in a bold attempt to break the stigma surrounding the disease.

German magazine Vangardist asked three HIV-positive people to donate their blood for this month’s magazine, which will have a print run of 3000 copies.

Vangardist told the Sydney Morning Herald the creation of the ink was subject to stringent controls, and that handling the magazine poses no risk of infection.

Despite years of activism, many people still view HIV as a taboo subject; statistics even suggest that an estimated 50% of HIV cases are discovered late because of the stigma around testing for the virus.

And with cases of HIV increasing 80% between 2003 and 2013, we can’t risk new cases going undetected.

Real life experience: I have HIV.

Jason Romeyko, the executive creative director who worked on the issue, says it’s important to keep working to eliminate the idea that HIV is ‘old news’.

“With this unique project, we want to create a response in a heartbeat by transforming the media into the very root of the stigma itself – by printing every word, line, picture and page of the magazine with blood from HIV positive people,” he told the Sydney Morning Herald.

“By holding the issue, readers are immediately breaking the taboo.”

Related content: She’s pregnant, HIV-positive, and isn’t fussed if her child is born with the virus.

What do you think of the magazine cover?

[post_snippet id=324408]

Related Stories

Recommended

Top Comments

Ineedacoffee 10 years ago

New coffee table classic?


JB 10 years ago

Yes you are missing the point. The disease itself is barely an issue any more for a person with access to health care. The stigma is the most painful part of the disease and the fears and lies surrounding it. This book opens up a forum for discussion and education (and obviously the blood ink is not infectious any more). This is the best way to reduce the spread. If there is no stigma people will get tested without denial and fear or people will use protection because the discussion is not a scary discussion...