Saturday, 26 June 2004

Silence in the time of plague, Weekend Australian, 26 June, 2004.

Silence in the time of plague: [1 All-round Country Edition]

Stapleton, JohnWeekend Australian [Canberra, A.C.T] 26 June 2004: 22.
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Researchers at the Centre for HIV Epidemiology and AIDS Research suggest that one bright spot, if it can be called that, is that Australia, unlike other countries, is showing low rates of HIV transmission through heterosexual sex or injecting drug use -- 22.6 per cent of new cases -- with some suspicion that this is an overestimate due to reluctance to report homosexual activity.
"People in the first one or two years of their diagnosis are really reluctant to talk about it," [Brent Allan] says. "There is still an enormous amount of shame, stigma and discrimination against HIV people, particularly in the gay community. Often they are terrified to tell anyone they have seroconverted [developed detectable antibodies to HIV in their blood serum]. They don't want to hear that they should have known better. They already feel they have failed. They made a mistake. Often when they tell people that gets reinforced. Then they become really quiet."
"Most men will not go to a doctor unless the situation is extreme. They don't want to seek assistance," he says. "We have gay men who find out they are HIV-positive when they have AIDS and are in hospital because they are sick. The only way we can address theproblem is to question why we haven't addressed the stigma in the gay community against being HIV-positive. Then we wouldn't have people fearing testing because they fear the results."

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