Spikes Asia

NZAF - Sperm Positive

DDB NEW ZEALAND, Auckland / AIDS FOUNDATION / 2021

Awards:

1 Grand Prix Spikes Asia
2 Gold Spikes Asia
1 Bronze Spikes Asia
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Overview

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Credits

OVERVIEW

Background

Since 1981, HIV has been a death sentence. Medical advancements have changed that – and now, with treatment, HIV becomes undetectable in the body and cannot be passed on, even through unprotected sex, bodily fluid, or childbirth. But because most people don't know this, the stigma of HIV has never changed.

For World AIDS Day 2019, the New Zealand AIDS Foundation needed an idea that would fight the stigma of HIV by showing that the virus cannot be passed on in a way the world has never seen before.

We needed the campaign to have a big impact on a very small budget and create a new conversation about the truth of HIV. So, we did the unthinkable – we created the world’s first sperm bank for HIV-positive sperm donors.

Idea

To show the world that HIV cannot be passed on, we created Sperm Positive: The World’s First HIV-Positive Sperm Bank. The online sperm bank gave men living with HIV the opportunity to join and become sperm donors, it gave women the opportunity to register as recipients and allowed us to create a PR-led conversation that would show the world that HIV cannot be passed on in the most undeniable way possible – childbirth.

Strategy

The stigma of HIV still exists all over the world – it’s a hugely polarizing topic. So, we leaned into the problem to ensure we could create a conversation topic that would make a big impact on a very small budget.

By creating a sperm bank for HIV-positive sperm donors, we were able to create a campaign that shocked and educated people all over the world, delivering our key message that when treated, HIV cannot be passed on - even through childbirth.

It also allowed us to reach out to our community of men and women living with HIV, so we could share their stories and let them be a part of tackling the stigma of HIV.

Execution

We used World AIDS Day 2019 to launch Sperm Positive, opening our online sperm bank with an online video that called for donors and recipients to register. Our sperm bank allowed donors and recipients to join, and delivered our key message about how that when treated, HIV cannot be passed on.

Our call for donors and recipients was quickly picked up by media all over the world, sharing our key message, and generating a global conversation about the reality of HIV.

Outcome

Sperm Positive instantly created a global conversation about the reality of HIV.

Within a week, 94 countries shared our story, as we managed to reach an audience of over 1.8 billion.

Now, Sperm Positive isn't just changing beliefs - it's changing lives. To date, 4 babies are due in 2021, 32 women have registered as recipients, 27 HIV-positive sperm donors have joined.

And at 9:10am on January 19th, 2021, our first mother went into labour - the first birth from an HIV-positive sperm bank.

Our campaign has changed behaviors in a way few thought was possible - it has seen people not only begin to accept people living with HIV, but to accept them as sperm donors to have a child with.

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