Posts Tagged ‘Add new tag’

aids2031 - what we can do to change the face of the pandemic by 2031

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

To learn more about aids2031, follow this link: www.aids2031.org/about

aids2031 is a consortium of partners who have come together to look at what we have learned about the AIDS response as well as consider the implications of the changing world around AIDS.

Based on innovative thinking, critical analysis and public debate, aids2031 will create the report An Agenda for the Future–charting options to achieve the best possible outcome for the future.

aids2031 is about mobilizing the global AIDS response to include a long-term view and take into account the consequences of our actions as well as inactions.

aids2031 is not about what we should do in 2031, but what we can do differently now, to change the face of the pandemic by 2031

UMass Medical students attend free HIV testing seminar at AIDS Project Worcester

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

On Friday, September 11,  AIDS Project Worcester hosted a second group of students from UMass Medical School to teach them how to use the  Ora Quick Advanced Testing kit.  Marilyn Rodriguez, HIV Counseling and Testing Coordinator at the agency, said this is the third year the agency has reached out to the medical school students so they can add HIV counseling and testing skills to services they will offer at free clinics in the area. “The number of medical student who come to this seminar has tripled in the past three years,” said Marilyn. “I couldn’t be happier with the students’ enthusiasm, engergy, and commitment.” More than 50 medical students came to the agency in August and September to attend this free training. Marilyn pointed out that AIDS Project Worcester will also supply the clinics with the Ora Quick testing kit - free of charge - and will supervise the students. ”We also offer anonymous and free testing here at the agency five days a week,” explains Marilyn. “It’s all about stopping the spread of HIV/AIDS. Get tested. Know your status. Get support.”  If you have questions email Marilyn at marilyn@aidsprojectworcester.org

Celebrate the healing power of the arts

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

On April 24, the Massachusetts Psychiatric Rehab Association (MassPra) will be hosting a “Day of Creativity” at VinFen in Sommerville. The event is free and open to the public. 

 

The point of this day is for consumers, mental health professionals, and their allies (and these titles often overlap!) to come together and celebrate the healing power of the arts. All the information is below.

 

I will be co-facilitating a movement workshop (also noted below) during the day. I am not sure about the time, but I can promise you that if you are interested, I will let you know more. I can also promise you that my movement workshops have been deemed both “really fun” and “not boring” by the patients, children, and fellow grad students who have experienced them thus far.

 

I hope some of you can come, and if you can’t, that you will spread the word!!

 

Peace out,

Alexia

 

Safer sex in the gay and biwomen’s Worcester community

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

The other night on outreach duty at a local gay nightclub, as I was filling up the condom bucket in the ladies bathroom, a young woman came in, took a dental dam out and asked “when the hell will I ever need this?”

I told her that dental dams, squares of latex of polyurethane meant to cover someone’s vagina or anus during oral sex, are good for avoiding coming in contact with blood and vaginal fluids. Those fluids can spread HIV from an HIV positive person to someone who is HIV negative.

At this point, she appeared kind of worried, asking me, “Do you think I could have an STD?” I told her that no one can tell for sure just by looking, but that anyone who is sexually active should get tested for Sexually Transmitted Diseases and HIV regularly.  

Just then, another woman, who seemed to know her, came into the bathroom and told me “If I have to use one of those things (meaning dental dams), I’m not going there (meaning, sex with that woman).” Then they both left.

The conversation made me reflect on my own experiences in the gay and bi women’s community here in Worcester. I’m from this city, and I realized that I’ve never once been intimate with a woman who pulled out a dental dam, or said anything about safe sex. Actually, as women having sex with women, we mostly assumed that the sex was automatically safe. We thought there was no need for a dental dam or any other kind of protection- WE certainly weren’t going to get HIV. I had heard vaguely about herpes and HPV… but I thought these were things that happened to straight girls.

In fact, I realized, I had never even heard of a dental dam before starting work with AIDS Project Worcester.

I shared these experiences with a friend from out of town, who looked shocked. My friend told me about growing up in the D.C. area, where it was apparently considered very rude to have sex with a woman in the gay and bi community without using gloves and a dental dam at least. The idea seemed to be that one just assumed that it was safe sex, or no go, and that safe sex was the only acceptable way to have sex in that community. The conversation really made an impression on me – it was so different from what I see and experience here in Worcester.

The reality is, even if you are a woman who only has sex with other women, you are at risk for HIV and STDS like syphilis, chlamydia or gonorrhea if you come in contact with another person’s blood or vaginal fluids. Getting gonorrhea of the throat from oral sex is a REAL RISK, and it REALLY HAPPENS. Some STDS, like HPV (the virus that causes genital warts) and herpes can be contracted just from skin to skin contact. The best way to avoid getting HIV or an STD is to use barrier methods- like dams or gloves, for example. And, if you are having unprotected sex, getting tested regularly for HIV and STDs is your best bet.

Having said that, it seems apparent to me that here in Worcester, in the gay and bi women’s community, we don’t have a widespread culture of using barrier methods like dental dams. What do we need to do to change this? How can we be safer individually, and promote a culture of safe sex in our community?

These are the questions I’m asking myself… what you do think?

Posted by Cha Cha