CWRU AIDS Clinical Trials Unit

CWRU AIDS Clinical Trials Unit The AIDS Clinical Trials Unit at Case Western Reserve / University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center

The AIDS Clinical Trials Unit at Case Western Reserve University has been in continuous operation since 1987, offering a wide variety of HIV-related clinical trials for both HIV-positive and HIV-negative people. Throughout the years, thousands of people have participated in clinical trials and research projects offered through the Case ACTU. By volunteering for a clinical trial, each of these peop

le has made their own personal contribution to the discovery of life-giving medicines and new ways to prevent the continued spread of HIV in our community and throughout the world. The Case ACTU consists of three Clinical Research Sites: University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, University of Cincinnati ID Center, and the Joint Clinical Research Center, located in Kampala, Uganda. The Case ACTU is primarily affiliated with the AIDS Clinical Trials Group (ACTG).

CLE Bites: Falafel Cafe's Next Chapter by Doug Trattner for Cleveland Scene Magazine [We often order dinner from Falafel...
05/30/2026

CLE Bites: Falafel Cafe's Next Chapter
by Doug Trattner for Cleveland Scene Magazine
[We often order dinner from Falafel Café for our monthly CAB meetings, and love Mae and her menu.]

One of the main reasons that family businesses fail is a lack of interest by the next generation to assume responsibility. We’ve seen that plight play out time and time again, especially with respect to ethnic restaurants. Why peddle pierogi when you can be a doctor, a lawyer, a freewheeling influencer.

That was almost the fate of Falafel Café, a Lebanese restaurant with nearly 30 years under its belt.

“Mom said, the lease is ending, I’m tired, I’m over it,” says Sirjoon Elassal.

And why shouldn’t she be? After 18 years in a prominent corner location in University Circle, Hani and Mae Elassal were forced out of their spot by UCI and left scrambling to secure a new location. And then Hani passed away, leaving Mae a widow. But Mae persevered and eventually reopened Falafel Café in a less visible spot at Uptown.

But now, six years later, Mae is ready to retire.

And who should come to her and her restaurant’s rescue but the prodigal son, back home following professional careers in New York and Denver.

“I’ve been in the industry my whole life,” he says. “I’m pretty equipped to take this restaurant over. And not in the way of just taking it over.”

Elassal received his master’s degree in organizational psychology with a specific focus on hospitality. He’s held most of the positions a restaurant has to offer, and he grew up alongside the family business. Falafel Café started out as Cedar Deli, a nebulous name for a Middle Eastern restaurant. The original spot opened in South Euclid in 1998, at a time when falafel, shawarma and fatayer were still plenty exotic sounding.

The family eventually changed the name and opened the new spot in University Circle, long before the developers sunk their claws into the area. Falafel Café did so well, in fact, that the Elassals busted down a wall to expand the restaurant. But now, thanks to a forced move, the restaurant is tucked away down a pretend alleyway in a manufactured neighborhood. Such is life.

To prepare Falafel Café for its next chapter, Elassal will lock the front doors and tackle a complete overhaul of the space and the menu. The last day will be June 7 and the reopening should occur in early August.

“I’m decolonizing the restaurant, bringing back the Lebanese authenticity,” Elassal explains. “We don’t want to serve corporate slop. We want to serve really good, authentic food.”

Elassal says that his parents did what a lot of restaurant owners of their generation did: expand the menu in an effort to appeal to the widest possible audience. For them, that meant serving both falafel and gyros, baba ghanoush and cheese Phillys, spinach pies and hamburgers.

When Falafel Café reopens in time for the fall semester, it will do so with a focused, committed and streamlined menu. The interior will showcase the restaurant’s rich history while bringing back a feature from its earliest days as Cedar Deli, a retail section boasting Middle Eastern pantry goods.

Elassal says that he is excited to get started and optimistic about the restaurant’s future.

“I wanted to get away from the family restaurant for so long and then I got over myself,” he says. “The restaurant is such a great opportunity, not only to flex culinary stuff but also to have community, to work with other businesses. I’m in such a fortunate position.”

Now that Elassal has signed a new lease, it’s time for mom to move on to the next chapter of her life as the “Historian of Falafel,” he adds.

“She is super excited. She has wanted this for us for a long time. The hope is to let her go and enjoy herself and enjoy the world and let the restaurant be the restaurant.”

June 5th is HIV Long-Term Survivors Awareness Day, a day that is especially meaningful this year in the face of increasi...
05/29/2026

June 5th is HIV Long-Term Survivors Awareness Day, a day that is especially meaningful this year in the face of increasing cuts to healthcare and targeted attacks on communities most impacted by HIV/AIDS - black people, transgender women, and gay, bis*xual, and other men who have s*x with men. 2026 marks a sobering anniversary of the first official report of AIDS: 45 years and 45 million dead around the world.

ACT UP Cleveland is leading a Sunset Candlelight Vigil this year to commemorate HIV Long-Term Survivors Awareness Day. We will be joined by many others across the country in honoring HIV Long-Term Survivors and in remembrance of all lives lost due to healthcare cuts.

This nationwide vigil on June 5th is part of Seven Days In June: HEALTH IS PRIMARY, a broad, non-partisan, nationwide mobilization June 1-7 to demand our elected officials go on the record and answer for these cuts. https://www.sevendaysinjune.org

Health cuts kill, and we will not let them hide from this - SILENCE = DEATH. We stand alongside frontline nurses, patients, and healthcare advocates like actor Noah Wyle (The Pitt) to protect our care.

Join us at 8pm on June 5th at the Free Stamp to show our leaders that health is not just a budget line - it is our survival. RSVP for our event here.
https://www.sevendaysinjune.org/event/46/june-5th-candlelight-vigil-610-lakeside-avenue-east-cleveland-oh-44114-united-st/

Call your elected officials to Save HIV Funding using this template. https://savehivfunding.org/fy27hivfunding/

ACT UP! 🔥 FIGHT BACK! 🔥 FIGHT AIDS! 🔥

Wow, almost 1/4 of the school's 200-year history! 🔥
05/29/2026

Wow, almost 1/4 of the school's 200-year history! 🔥

After 47 years at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine’s Department of Biochemistry, William “Bill” Merrick, PhD, is stepping into...

Check out the new  POZ Magazine HIV-Prevention Drug Chart, and contact us if you'd like to learn more from our PrEP navi...
05/26/2026

Check out the new POZ Magazine HIV-Prevention Drug Chart, and contact us if you'd like to learn more from our PrEP navigators at UH. 💜

This quick-reference chart compares antiretroviral options for the prevention of HIV, including adult dosing information.

HIV Vaccine Awareness Day ( ) is observed annually on May 18 to recognize the scientists, volunteers, and health profess...
05/18/2026

HIV Vaccine Awareness Day ( ) is observed annually on May 18 to recognize the scientists, volunteers, and health professionals working to develop a safe and effective preventive HIV vaccine. Led by the NIH, this day highlights the importance of continued research and community participation in trials to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic. 🔥

Research should never happen *about* communities without happening *with* communities.The future of HIV advocacy, public...
05/18/2026

Research should never happen *about* communities without happening *with* communities.

The future of HIV advocacy, public health, and community-centered research depends on younger voices having a seat at the table today. 🔥

To every young advocate, organizer, student, researcher, peer educator, and community member: Your perspective matters more than you know. 💜

Tomorrow, May 17, is International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia. A day where we show up for LGBTQ+ y...
05/17/2026

Tomorrow, May 17, is International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia. A day where we show up for LGBTQ+ young people. 🌈🏳️‍⚧️🏳️‍🌈💜 Learn more at https://www.thetrevorproject.org

Brava to our trailblazing colleague, Dr. Grace McComsey! 💜
05/15/2026

Brava to our trailblazing colleague, Dr. Grace McComsey! 💜

Congratulations to Grace McComsey, one of two winners of the 2025 Faculty Distinguished Research Awards! Her patient‑driven research on HIV and Long COVID is advancing understanding of complex metabolic and cardiovascular complications. Learn more about McComsey's life-changing research: https://brnw.ch/21x2hRW

Save the Date:   candlelight vigilFriday, June 5 @ sunset @ the Free Stamp A National Call to Elevate Health as a Govern...
05/14/2026

Save the Date:
candlelight vigil
Friday, June 5 @ sunset @ the Free Stamp

A National Call to Elevate Health as a Governing Priority
https://www.sevendaysinjune.org

June 5 is also HIV Long-Term Survivors Awareness Day

Address

Foley Medical Bldg, 2061 Cornell Road
Cleveland, OH
44106

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+12168444444

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