this morning are shawn jain, who is director of communication for whitman walker health and dwayne lawson-brownman walker's youth health educator. welcome to both of you. >> thank you. >> shawn, until last year, the event was aids walk washington. last year you changed the name. because you changed the focus. >> absolutely. we were the first walk in the country to change our name from aids walk to the walk to end hiv. and it's because hiv has been with us now for over three decades. but we're not in the same place now, thankfully that we were even ten years ago, 20 years ago, 30 years ago. it used to be that aids equals death. now hiv is a chronic condition, people living with hiv who are on treatment can live just as long as someone who is not hiv infected. and there's so much stigma around the term "aids." and there's so much kind of misinformation still about aids. that we wanted to emphasize that language is important, it's important that we talk about this as hiv as a chronic condition. yes, it's serious. yes, everyone should get tested. yes, you should be on treatment if you are hiv posit