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“He who conceals his disease cannot expect to be cured”
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The Faces of AIDS in Kentucky "Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen and thinking what nobody has thought." Albert von Szent-Gyorgyi "Home is not a place; it is an attitude. It is an attitude which depends on how much we are able to feel at home with ourselves as well as with others. Home is something which happens to a person; homecoming has less to do with geography than it has to do with a sense of personal integrity or inner wholeness. The most important of all endeavors in life is to come home. The most terrifying of fears is loneliness. It means that one has become a stranger to himself, and consequently, to others. To be lonely is to feel fear, to be forever unsettled, never at rest, in need of more reassurance than life can give. Someone truly loves us when he brings us home; when he makes us comfortable with ourselves, when he takes from us the strangeness we feel at being who we are. We are loved when we no longer are frightened with ourselves." "Dawn Without Darkness" - Anthony Padavano Friday, November 12, 2004 Date: Wed Mar 13, 2002 9:15 am Question: What exactly is HIV positive? Also, this is kind of a difficult question, but if a person with HIV infection has survived for the past 10 years, how much longer will he continue to do so? One last question, is there any sexual activity for him that can be engaged in without his partner contracting the virus? HIV - positive simply means infection with HIV. It is not synonymous with AIDS (which is and always has been an arbitrary constellation of indicator conditions). The virus is active making copies of itself (and typically destroying the CD4+ cells) from the moment it enters the body. The average time someone survives from the moment of infection until death (due to HIV) continues to increase. At the beginning of the epidemic, the average time was about 10 years. Many people confuse the date of diagnosis with the date of actual infection. The former is usually well known, the latter typically not known at all. There can be
many years separating the two dates. It currently is estimated that at least 25% of persons infected with HIV today will survive for more than 20 years, utilizing drugs and treatments available today. The effect of combination antiretroviral therapy has been estimated to have added at least 3 years to the average survival of 7 years ago. Average survival today (of persons infected 5-10 years
ago) is about 15 years from moment of infection until death. But averages are exactly that: averages. More precise estimates for individuals depend on current and past HIV RNA levels, current and past CD4+ cell counts, number of antiretroviral regimens used, adherence to therapy, response to therapy, current health status, and CD4+ cell count trends over time. At least 5% of HIV infected persons
are estimated to be long term non-progressors. That is, in the absence of therapy, these individuals maintain a CD4+ cell count 450 cells and typically have HIV RNA levels < 5000 copies/ml. It is not clear what immunologic features distinguish these individuals from the other 95% of HIV infected persons. Reaching the Unreachable.. Online Outreach Outreach professionals are always looking for those hard-to-reach populations where HIV education is in desparate need. They take to the streets; to local bars and clubs; to bath houses. Now there is a new way to reach those hard to reach populations...online. The need for this type of outreach is certainly there. The web site Gay.com surveyed 3000 of their site visitors. 84% of those visitors reported they had met sexual partners online (Brown, Washington Post, 2/03). Other studies have traced STD outbreaks to internet chat rooms. many who have been diagnosed with STDs report the met the person who infected them via the internet. Why the Internet? Knowing one another brings us to the second reason the internet is so appealing. People can be whatever or whoever they please. Six feet tall, blue eyes and blond hair....an artist....an athelete...single....or "well endowed". The internet provides a safety net for those who want to pretend. On the other side of that same coin, chat rooms allow people to be themselves without the fear of rejection. Being cast aside online is a far cry from being rejected in person. Chatters are free to learn about one another without the pressures of that uncomfortable "first meeting". Finally, the internet can be a very private place. Many people exploring their sexual desires want to do so under the umbrella of anonymity. For instance, many heterosexual men look for male sexual partners to explore their bisexual desires. They wish to keep these relationships and their feelings of bisexuality from their wives or girlfriends. Chat rooms are a perfect place to do so. Is there a need for online outreach? What is the advantage of online outreach? Does online outreach work? Reaching the unreachable...online outreach and prevention. Using the internet to educate...ironic...that's what the founding fathers of the internet had intended all along. Copyright © 2004 About, Inc. About and About.com are registered trademarks of About, Inc. The About logo is a trademark of About, Inc. All rights reserved.
For the POZ CommUNITY on The South Bank, our "Circle of Friends" and supporters; the SoBnkHIVe is hosted by a long term survivor of HIV - The QUEEN Bee, Thank You! Worlds Apart Why are HIVers in New York City’s Harlem neighborhood dying at twice the rate of HIVers in the gay enclave of Chelsea? A case study of the ever-widening gulf that divides the United States of AIDS
THE GROWING DIVIDE
The health department says Harlem and Chelsea aren’t the only disparity: Across the city, people in whiter, wealthier neighborhoods live longer than those in poorer, darker ones—even when the two are side by side. Next to Chelsea, the (also relatively affluent) Greenwich Village–SoHo area had the city’s second-lowest PWA death rate, at 12.2, while an adjacent district with a high concentration of public-housing projects had the city’s highest—at 43.9, almost four times higher. And it’s not just black and white. Consider other high-mortality neighborhoods, like the South Bronx and Crown Heights, both heavily Latino. “When we start comparing Harlem and Chelsea, one of the first differences that jumps out to us is race,” says Juan Battle, a professor of sociology at New York City’s Hunter College. “But if you look again, there’s another difference, which is class.” And it’s there, at the American juncture of race and income, where HIV diverges into a kind of apartheid. The divide may not be as stark as that between HIVers in the West and those in Africa or Asia, but it’s impossible to ignore. Middle-class HIVers (still mostly gay white men) reap HAART’s promise of a “chronic manageable illness,” while the underclass (overwhelmingly African American) often lives as if HAART had never arrived. “What you see in Harlem mirrors a lot of urban areas in this country,” says Carole Bernard of the National Minority AIDS Council. And the disparity between Chelsea and Harlem could as well be the disparity between Dupont Circle and Anacostia in Washington, DC; West Hollywood and South Central in Los Angeles; South Beach and Liberty City in Miami; tony Atlanta and large swathes of the poor, rural south, where AIDS rates are climbing. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, between 1993 and 2001 (a span during which life-saving HAART was introduced), the deaths of PWAs nationally dropped by an estimated 75 percent among whites, but only by 50 percent among blacks. By 2000, AIDS rates (as opposed to just HIV) were nine times higher in blacks than in whites. Most studies have attributed such staggering rates to both late diagnoses and poor HAART adherence. But they are inextricably linked to poverty itself. When poor people get sick, it’s often from causes that are impossible to untangle: years of cheap food; asthma from pollutants (most of New York City’s bus depots are concentrated in Harlem); IV drug use—which has little to do with race but does correlate closely with geography and class—that weakens their bodies and their resolve. Most damaging: the lack of preventive care that comes from having no health insurance or high-cost insurance, and relying on the ER. Says Battle, “Poor populations don’t see the health care system as serving a preventive function—it’s serving a treatment function. So if you’re not sick, you’re not gonna go.” And then there are the intangibles: depression; hopelessness; a corrosive distrust of the medical establishment. “You say one word incorrectly, and you’ve suddenly got a very angry client who’s ready to run out the door and never come back,” says Daniel Weglein, MD, Deborah’s doctor and Harlem United’s medical director. “It doesn’t matter how much services, treatment and counseling is out there if people aren’t ready to engage in care.” “If you’re HIV positive, and you’re also homeless, and you have a substance abuse problem, and your children are in foster care, getting treatment for HIV is probably last on your list of priorities,” says Harlem United’s Cynthia Ceilan. “You’re either looking for your next fix, or trying to get your kids back, or trying to find a place to live.” Even when low-cost AIDS treatment services are available, poor people often don’t—or can’t—use them. If they do, the effort it takes just to stay “compliant” can be overwhelming. “Can we deal with HIV in poor communities without dealing with poverty?” Battle asks. “I would argue no. It hasn’t worked with high blood pressure, it hasn’t worked with asthma, it hasn’t worked with diabetes, and it won’t work with HIV” (see “Closing the Gap” ). I keep a HIVe abundant with shared experiences, support, education, and information, kept aglow with the warmth of acceptance for all who shall seek us out... WELCOME!!! Answering your questions about HIV/STDs transmission and prevention, what is risky sexual behavior and what isn't, HIV testing. Promoting sexual health, especially preventing HIV transmission in NKY and greater Cincinnati. All questions are confidential.
Clint Ibele, Education/Prevention Specialist 859.363.2094
NKYCinHIVAIDSinfo-owner@yahoogroups.com
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