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4/18
We are gearing up to welcome Jeanne White-Ginder, mother of Ryan White, to our major May 20th teen rally in Boston. Stay tuned.
On May 20, Dr, John is also announcing his "Heart of Africa AIDS Walk". He iwill personally train 10,000 volunteer peer teachers in Rwanda, Congo D.R., Angola and Sudan. You can participate in the interactive outreach by webcast, email and Skype phone. CAN YOU DONATE PLEASE?
Fedor "Ted" Zahynayko from the Ukraine is our first overseas PeerCorps volunteer working in our U.S. headquarters.
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If you are having trouble viewing the flash images and text above, click here.
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Teens, help Dr. John's research by taking the Short Survey. By completing the Long Survey in full, you receive a small gift from Dr. John and TeenAIDS.
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Location: Blogs Dr. John's Personal Blog |
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| Posted by: host |
9/29/2006 |
Last week the CDC (Atlanta) made a
surprise announcement that every American citizen should be regularly
tested for HIV, from the age of 13 and up! I say this is surprising
because this is the first time that a branch of the U.S. government is
officially aknowledging that teens as young as 13 are now at real risk
for getting HIV/AIDS. We know from the overwhelming amount of research
that maturing adolescents are becoming sexually involved in the early
teen years. By the age of 16, a majority of US teenagers have reported
that they have had at least one sexual experience. By 18, 70% of males
report that they have had sexual expierences, as do 60% of females. I
believe these numbers are on the low side because some teens say to me
that when asked on a survey form at school about sex or drugs, they
lie because they don't want to share their intimate personal secrets
with adult authority figures (where they canbe identified). The point
however, about the CDC announcement that is important to us at
TeenAIDS, is that it recognizes that a teenHIV epidemic is brewing in
the U.S., a point that I have been talking about for 15
years.
ALL TEENS ARE POTENTIALLY AT RISK FOR
HIV; AND A MAJORITY OF TEENAGERS ARE AT RISK WHENEVER THEY HAVE
UNPROTECTED SEX.
My advice: Get tested if you want. It
can't hurt. It might help a teenager to know their HIV-positive status
because there are medicines available to help slow down the negative
physical effects of AIDS. However in this day of cyberspace
record-keeping, I thtink it is wise to be tested anonymously - and not
use your own name (anonymous testing means you are given a number or a
special code that identifies your test results). Why? Because nothing
can be kept truly secret and we know that insurance companies will
decline to take as clients young people who have simply gone for
a HIV test because to them, that is a sign that these people must feel
that they could possibly be at risk for HIV/AIDS and thus, would be
bad for insurance coverage. Please remember that AIDS testing is
never accurate to the date you are tested. There is always a lag time
between actual HIV infection and the ability of any tests to discover
the HIV antibodies.
Volunteers needed: Please go to
our World AIDS Day box above on the front page to volunteer your time
and talents to make the first ever live webcast to teens a big
success. If you know a school that would like to sponsor its own World
AIDS Day event and have it publicized on our site with photos and
recognition, tell them about our webcast. If you are a teen or you
know a teenager, and would like to volunteer to set up an event, I
urge you to do so ASAP. We want to reach 1,000,000 youth on World AID
Day's Friday December 1st and Saturday, December 2nd.
Looking for Adult support:
TeenAIDS is in the process of interviewing adult leaders to join our
Board of Directors, our Global Advisory Council, or become a Senior
Advisor. Please contact Dr. John at our email address : <chittick@post.harvard.edu>
Thanks to WorldLingo: By October 7, we will offer instant
translation of any of the materials on our website (see their logo and
info under In-Kind Donors under "Donate.")
Foreign Translations of Emails: We are now using
"gmail" for corresponding with non-English speaking teens:
Gmail allows instantaneous translations in about 30 foreign
languages. If you want information on how to get a gmail for yourself, click here.
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