Move over Andrew Bolt …

Generation Y-not

ynot

Although Emily Marks, Eliza Elkington, Alison Moore, Grace Cameron-Lee and Megan Gaudry, who we met in Manly last week, don’t engage in risky behaviour, they know people who have Picture: Tim Hunter Source: The Sunday Telegraph

THEY are the modern day invincibles. A generation of young women who blithely out-drink and out-smoke men, who routinely sunbake without protection and some engage in unsafe sex.

Health professionals are increasingly worried about the growing band of women who think they’re bulletproof.

The reckless behaviour is exposing some of them to sexually transmitted infections at record levels, with health officials saying Australia is in the middle of a chlamydia epidemic.

Adding to the concern is that some girls are having sex younger than ever. Research by Durex shows the average age teens have intercourse for the first time is 16 — two years younger than a decade ago.

An investigation by The Sunday Telegraph has revealed alarm about the health of young women and their attitude to sex, alcohol and even the sun.

“Young women aren’t taking responsibility for their health and safety,” Sexual Health Australia director Desiree Spierings said. “They have a relaxed attitude to unprotected sex as well.”

Many young women The Sunday Telegraph spoke to were open about the pressures they face from their social groups, egged on by edgy TV shows that feature sex, drugs and alcohol. Although the girls we spoke to at Manly last week didn’t engage in risky behaviour, they knew others who did.

“Sex is publicised as being really cool,” Eliza Elkington of Lapstone said, adding that Facebook has become a playground for full-on sex talk.

Emily Marks, 18, said: “The age girls are starting to have sex is much younger. In Year 7 there was no one doing it, but having just finished Year 12 we look at the younger students and they’re all doing it.”

Grace Cameron-Lee, 18, of Blaxland said: “It’s not that we think we’re bulletproof. It’s that we don’t always consider all the consequences.”

AIDS Action Council CEO Andrew Burry said: “We have a generation of kids in school with no real exposure to information about HIV, being taught by people, many of whom have also had no education or information about HIV.”

While we wait for the review of the Prostitution Act …

As we wait for the report from the committee undertaking a review of the ACT Prostitution Act, it is worth taking another look at this excellent report from 7.30 ACT, which aired towards the end of last year. The reporter was very sensitive and non-judgemental and presented a very balanced report in the end. The workers that were interviewed greatly appreciated the manner in which a difficult topic (from the community perspective) was handled.

http://www.dailymotion.com/swf/video/xnt0s7
7.30 ACT: Review of Prostitution ACT by andrewburry

Does HIV still matter to gay men?

The following article is reproduced from http://www.samesame.com.au/news/local/7828/Does-HIV-still-matter-to-gay-men.htm and go there to see the comments the story generated.

I see these periodic articles about how gay men are complacent, or young gay guys are ignorant of the risks. While you can’t be both complacent AND ignorant, either can certainly be true. For some years now I have been banging on about young gay men being in themselves a priority population. As the figures for NSW below demonstrate, young men in their 20′s are a substantial proportion of new infections. Despite the date showing this for the last 5 – 6 years, no priority was given to this group in the Sixth National Strategy and similarly, little regard (if any) in the new HIV Testing Policy.

I can’t help concluding that there is a correlation between these oversights and the fact that leadership throughout the HIV sector is made up of older people such as myself.

 

www.samesame.com.au

About the Author

www.samesame.com.au

Matt Akersten

Unlike during the 1990s, it might seem that no-one is dying of AIDS now. People living with the virus are looking healthier, and in New South Wales HIV infection rates have stabilised.

But the pool of people living with HIV is larger than ever, and infection rates have risen sharply in other areas of Australia and around the world in recent years.

This summer’s campaign by HIV/AIDS prevention and support network ACON hopes to address myths people might have about gay men’s health today, and give men having sex with men The Big Picture about the HIV epidemic.

The Big Picture website answers common questions and assumptions gay men might have about HIV, including ‘HIV isn’t that much of an issue these days’ and ‘When are HIV infections most likely to happen?’

Another question sometimes asked is: “Is it true that HIV only affects older gay men?”

As the graph below of 2010 HIV infections in NSW shows, the virus can affect anyone, regardless of their age – Many men were in their 30s and 40s when they are diagnosed with HIV; however, men in their 20s also make up a big part of HIV diagnoses each year.

ACON’s Director of Community Health Geoff Honnor hopes the Q&A’s in The Big Picture will stimulate discussion – and possibly more questions, which ACON are happy to answer.

“The epidemic is ever-evolving so it’s important to keep guys in the picture,” he says. “As a community, our level of HIV-related knowledge is pretty good, though as always, it varies between individuals and there’s still a few surprisingly common misconceptions kicking around.

“But overall, thirty years into it, the continuing resilience of gay guys – poz and neg – in this state in responding to HIV is pretty impressive. In fact, the comparative success attributed to the NSW HIV response owes a lot to that resilience and it could do with more acknowledgement.

“So, in offering information updates, The Big Picture also acknowledges the importance of the informed choices that gay men make about maximising pleasure and minimising risk – choices that ultimately deliver better outcomes for all of us.”

See The Big Picture website here.

Using condoms and water-based lube for anal sex, and getting regular sexual health checkups, is the best way to protect yourself against HIV and other sexually transmitted infections.

New UpFront article for AAC newsletter

Our latest newsletter is looking at a variety of issues that are affecting our work. Specifically, the growing conservatism in some media we have traditionally used that is trying to censor, edit or influence our style of communication. This poses problems for us, whilst at the same time, I can’t help but feel we have become increasingly bland in recent years and lost some of our direct connection with the communities we serve.

Up Front January/February

Unusual Penile Discharge

Why do parents sometimes struggle to get their kids to see things the way they want them to? Why do teachers need special skills to manage students’ behaviour? In essence, it is the nature of the relationship, where one is in a position of authority and human nature has an innate need to challenge. These are parentchild relationships having an imbalance in power and control.

We approach our work with our priority populations with a commitment to peer education. This isn’t because of some wishy-washy idealistic community sector fluffiness. No, it is because peer to peer sets up adultadult relationships and notions of power, authority and control are more or less eliminated. This generates an essential credibility on both sides.

Our work involves health promotion. In simple terms this means giving people information that encourages a set of behavioural choices that reduce risk to an acceptable level should they choose. It doesn’t involve judging their decisions.

In reality, adverse outcomes through risk decisions should cause us to think our information was not relevant and provided no incentive to think and act differently. For us to be relevant, we have to be able to communicate in a way that connects and engages our target audience. We are not the Government and should present our authority only in terms of subject expertise. More importantly, we are peers and this must be inherent in our communication style and message. This means we are dependent on our image as an organisation and dependent on using the language and terminology embraced by those we are seeking to influence.

Keiran Rossteuscher has written a very thoughtful piece in this newsletter about the difficulties we are increasingly facing with conservative media that wants to edit our language for fear of offending those for whom the messages are not intended. So instead of talking about ‘pissing razor blades’ to highlight a possible indication of a gonorrhoea infection, we are asked to refer to ‘uncomfortable urination’. Instead of referring to a ‘drippy dick’ we are encouraged to use a term like the title of this piece.

The implication of this is that we have to be creative in our media choices and find different opportunities to maintain a sense and sound of being peers.

But, I also think this raises another question, which is whether we have lost some of our ability to communicate in a peer way. It remains relatively easy to do so in directly communicating in workshops, but how about when our messages are presented through a third party conduit such as a magazine or bus shelter? How are we perceived by our community after a decade or more of bland (at times) and authoritarian (at times) communication? It is often argued, correctly, that the success of gay men in minimising the epidemic of HIV in the early days was because it was gay men themselves who responded in a collective way. A definitive example of peer education.

These days, we in health promotion are bureaucratised within a sophisticated national and international sector, buried under tons of behavioural and epidemiological research and dependent as workers on government largesse to fund our professional lives. In other words, it has become more and more difficult for the communities most affected and/or at risk of HIV to control the message.

It took half a century to cut the road toll and not much less to reduce the rate of smoking, and all with authoritative and Government sponsored messages; frequently built around fear. In only a handful of years, gay men devised and executed programs that resulted in most men choosing condoms most of the time, decimating the rate of new infection by 1988 and most gay men still use condoms most of the time.

Given that early success, one would have supposed that HIV would have disappeared by now, but it hasn’t and $140 million of government sponsored research over the last decade hasn’t told us why. I think we need to wake up and stop TELLING gay men what to do. Let’s stop being bland and act like the peers we supposedly are.