Blessings and Hotep
This day is a very important day and I can't stress enough how important it is for persons to go get tested, I know your maybe afraid or even thinking no you can't have it and no it can't happen for you,Honestly all who think like that must wake up and smell the coffee literally because this disease was created by man to eliminate our species it wasn't created for a dog or anything lesser than us so we must wake up and fight against it just dont sit and scorn people who have it cause you think in your head they got it from living reckless,cause babies dont get aids cause of their recklessness,neither do persons who have blood transfusions so don't scron or discriminate.If you dont get tested this epidemic would get rid of our future and the younger generation to come forth.
So Get Tested and Help Fight Against this Epidemic!
Facts:
HIV/AIDS in South Africa
The Country:South Africa
Region: Southern Africa
Capital City: Pretoria
Area: 471,010 sq mi; almost twice the size of Texas
Life Expectancy: 44 years
Population: 46.4 million, 75 percent Black
The low down on HIV/AIDS in South Africa:
HIV Infected: 5.3 million
AIDS Deaths: 370,000
AIDS Orphans: 1.1 million
An estimated 5.3 million South Africans were HIV-positive in 2003, according to a study conducted by the Human Sciences Research Council. Nearly half of all men and over one-third of women over 15 years of age, reports the Council, say they have changed their behavior as a result of HIV/AIDS, including being faithful to one partner, reducing the number of sexual partners, abstinence and use of a condom.
But statistics hardly ever tell the whole story. Read this firsthand account of how one South African student, now studying Political Science in the United States views the HIV/AIDS situation in his country:
Lionel; Johannesburg, South Africa--When I finished grade school the epidemic hadn’t really hit, but now I see a difference. There are a lot of orphanages because a lot of parents are dying and leaving their children.
There seems to be the perception in the West that South Africans are dropping like flies, but that’s not the case. The reality is that HIV/AIDS is very much concentrated in poor and rural areas in South Africa. There you’ll find men with a traditional way of thinking and condoms just don’t fit into it. HIV/AIDS is a problem of poverty. It will always be a problem as long as there is poverty.
In South Africa, prevention is everywhere-- on television and in the media. There’s a show called Soul City that is very popular. The show is sponsored by the department of health and is intended to spread the word of prevention. There are characters in other shows who will speak Zulu, so locals will understand and there might be a plot on a soap opera where, say there is a couple infected with HIV and they want to have a baby—but here in the U.S., if there are still arguments about whether or not sex education should be taught in schools, how can you really begin an open dialogue about HIV?
The government in South Africa uses TV shows and pamphlets, and condoms are available everywhere in the big cities, like Johannesburg, but they have to get the message out there to the rural areas in the middle of nowhere. Not only do they have to do that, but they also have to figure out a way to get the medications out there. A “Washington D.C.” or a “New York” isn’t that much different from a “Johannesburg”, but “rural” in South Africa is very much different than “rural” in the Western world.
Source: National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention Global AIDS Program, Centers for Disease Control and the CIA World Fact book
HIV/AIDS In Haiti
The Country:Haiti
Region: Caribbean
Capital City: Port-au-Prince
Area: 27,750 sq km; about the size of Maryland
Life Expectancy: 52 years
Population: 8.3 million, 95 percent Black
The low down on HIV/AIDS in Haiti:
HIV Infected: 216,000
AIDS Deaths: 30,000
AIDS Orphans: 200,000
Out of all of the countries in the Caribbean, Haiti is the most highly affected by HIV/AIDS. The small island nation, along with the Dominican Republic, accounts for 85 percent of all AIDS cases in the region. Heterosexual transmission is the most common vehicle of HIV/AIDS transmission, followed by mother-to-child transmission. There are approximately 11,300 HIV-positive women delivering children each year, with 3,970 more babies born infected with HIV/AIDS annually.
But statistics hardly ever tell the whole story. Read the firsthand account of what one African American of Haitian descent saw on a trip back to her homeland:
Vanessa, Massachusetts--Haiti in most eyes, despite the issue of AIDS is already considered a very desolate area in terms of poverty and political warfare, so when AIDS is thrown into the equation, its hard to truly differentiate between what is effecting whom and to what extent. On one of my visits to the country, I distinctly remember running into a frail young man on the street that, out of my own ignorance, I simply considered to be a vagabond out to steal the few bucks that I had. My uncle informed me of his story. Turns out that this man had caught the virus from his wife whom had also inflicted the disease on their children. They all, within the course of one year, died leaving him to fend for himself. With no means of purchasing the medication he desperately needed, the man had resorted to begging and looting for survival. Some even say that living with the disease drove him crazy.
His situation to me just epitomizes the issue in Haiti. When so many other issues are facing such a small and unfortunate nation, all the issues just seem to intermingle. Those suffering with AIDS don't have the medicine they need because they can't afford it, because someone robbed their local hospital of its supplies, or even worse, the corrupt government is prohibiting the delivery of them because of some corporate reason. Thus, those inflicted get angry or frustrated and turn around and do the same thing. It’s a vicious cycle and I honestly don't see a resolution anywhere in the near future.
Source: National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention Global AIDS Program, Centers for Disease Control and the CIA World Fact book
http://www.bet.com/Site+Management/Packages/aidsawareness.htm?wbc_purpose=Basic&WBCMODE=PresentationUnpublished&Referrer=%7B7D4F949E-6115-49C0-ADA7-DF7F59253045%7DAnd now to the ones very close to my heart Children who are living with HIV/AIDS
There are children who are themselves infected with HIV. By the end of 1997, 1.1 million children were living with HIV. AIDS is now the fifth leading cause of death amongst children of 1- 4 years, and seventh in young people between the ages of 15 and 24.
There are children who are uninfected but living in an infected family. More than 8 million children world-wide have already lost their mothers to AIDS, and at least 30 million are thought to be living with parents who are HIV positive. Of the people who died of AIDS in 1997, 2.3 million (46%) were women and 460,000 were children.
Who hear these cries of mothers and fathers watching their young being buried so early in their stages of thier lives and for children who comfort them and ease their pain when they have lost their whole family support to AIDS,NO ONE! and it is devasting and sad I hope the thoughts of those littleones losing their childhoods because they have to raise their siblings on their owns and fend for themselves at least speak to your heart to get tested and to join in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Much Blessings and Hotep
Also if you wish you can show your support for the global fight against aids here:www.lighttounite.com
Other Fact Link:http://www.avert.org/aidsimpact.htm