Want To Prevent HIV? Focus On Youth |
The United States Is No Exception: Half of All New Infections Occur Among Young People |
August 10, 2006 -- As thousands of young people from around the world join advocates, scientists, policymakers, journalists and health care providers at the XVI International AIDS Conference in Toronto this week, the fact that 15–24-year-olds account for nearly half of the five million new cases of HIV infection worldwide each year is sure to be frequently cited. |
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Less widely known is that 15–24-year-olds
account for half of the 40,000 new infections in the United States. Young
Americans also account for nearly half of new diagnoses of STIs other than HIV.
Like adolescents everywhere, American teens need honest, complete information
about sexual health to better protect themselves. There are three primary ways to avoid STIs,
including HIV: Avoid sex altogether, be in a long-term, mutually monogamous
relationship with an uninfected partner and use condoms consistently and
correctly. Effective prevention efforts must include all of these elements. Yet
the U.S. government pours millions of dollars into restrictive and unproven
abstinence-only-until-marriage programs that don’t address the realities of
teens’ lives and may even increase their risk of contracting an infection or
facing an unwanted pregnancy. And some policymakers cast doubt upon the
effectiveness of condoms, despite overwhelming evidence that they prevent the
most serious infection (HIV), the most easily transmitted infections (gonorrhea,
chlamydia and HPV) and unplanned pregnancy. “As a global leader in the HIV prevention
effort, the United States has an obligation to support medically accurate
information and proven programs to help young people around the world keep
themselves safe and healthy well into the future,” says Heather
Boonstra, senior policy associate with the Guttmacher Institute. “While
we’re doing this, we also need to focus on protecting the next generation here
at home. Promoting ignorance and shame in place of information and support, as
many abstinence-only programs do, leaves our young people without the practical
and emotional tools they need to protect themselves today and tomorrow.” To learn more about HIV and other STIs in the
United States, click here for Facts
on Sexually Transmitted Infections in the United States. To learn more about abstinence promotion in the
United States, click here. For more information on public funding for
abstinence-only sex education, click here. For more information on U.S. global AIDS policy
toward youth, click here. For adolescents’ perspectives on their sexual
and reproductive health (In Their Own Words), click here. Rebecca Wind |
| Source: http://www.guttmacher.org |
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