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Follow on Google News | Nashville Couple Is Proof That Love Survives All – Even Hiv29 Years After 6-months-to-live Prognosis – Love Has Been Jimbeau Hinson’s Strong Medicine
By: Jimbeau Hinson Hinson is grateful that he’s survived well beyond his initial 6-months-to- But Jimbeau’s no-pill “strongest medicine” is clearly wife Brenda’s love. Her love is the reason he is here today, and this love was crucial in 1985, when there was no medicine for HIV/AIDS treatment. Today, they both know and celebrate the power and strength of their love. “The love that Brenda and I express for one another is admired by all because it is the most honest and open relationship anybody has ever seen. Our love is unconditional.” On his album, Jimbeau candidly shares his Strong Medicine story: how he lives his life today, the realities of his bisexuality, and the painfully-kept HIV secret he hid for many years while he wrote great music for David Lee Murphy, Brenda Lee, Patti Loveless, Steve Earle, the Oak Ridge Boys, and others. Jimbeau feels his gift--his calling--is to be a messenger, to share this poignant, heartfelt, and inspirational Strong Medicine story about truth and love, in hopes he can help someone else cope with their diagnosis or avoid it altogether. “What I am most passionate about is talking to anybody, everybody really, about AIDS. No one is talking about the current infection rate, the cost of the drugs, the lifestyle that must accompany that cost, and the procurement of these drugs in order to survive,” Hinson says. He emphasizes, “The HIV statistics in the US are alarming! Every 9-½ minutes, someone is infected with HIV. In 2010, gay and bisexual men made up 63% of all new infections, and among that group, it’s the young men ages 13-24 that are becoming infected at the fastest rate. A woman is infected every 35 minutes, and 20% of those infected are not aware of their status. HIV is not a gay disease; it is a disease that does not discriminate.” Hinson sees these statistics as a big problem that he wants to help change by teaching that that HIV is a preventable disease, a completely avoidable infection. “I want to be one who not only talks about it, but gets others to take care not to get infected with HIV in the first place,” says Hinson. Hinson is completing his autobiography-- For more of the latest news and information on Jimbeau Hinson, visit www.jimbeauhinson.com or follow him on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ For booking presentations and/or CD signings, contact brendafielder@ Press Contact: Helen Trimble / Trimble PR Ph: 310-699-3568 or Heltrim1@gmail.com (mailto:Heltrim1@ End
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