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HIV/AIDS awareness low among DC teenagers

By Jasmine Berry (12th grader), Favour Okechukwu (10th grader)

Issue date: 8/19/07 Section: Cover

Unlike most District teenagers, 15-year-old Kanesha Overton considers herself well informed about the rising epidemic of HIV/AIDS in the Greater Washington area. But her knowledge about the disease, she says, came from her babysitter, not HIV/AIDS information campaigns or sex education programs.

"I learned about the disease from my babysitter, by her talking to me about it at a young age, starting at about age six," said Overton, a student at Banneker Academic High School. "When I became older, it made me more aware about the truth."

Overton also learned about sex the hard way. Her mother got pregnant with Overton's older brother at age 19 and the father was 22. Before her father could wed her mother, he died of a gunshot to his head. Kanesha was three years old at the time.

But Overton's mother made sure that her daughter did not repeat her mistakes. She began talking to her and explaining what sex was at the age of 13, speaking mostly of its consequences, such as diseases. "My mother always told me, when she had sex and how it affected her life," she said. "It makes me want to wait until I get married."

Such are the sources of sex and HIV/AIDS awareness for many teenagers these days. Overton's story underscores the reality that many teenagers are not getting their information about sex and sexually transmitted diseases from sex education campaigns or programs grown-ups devise for them. Neither are they using the traditional tools grown-ups use to deliver HIV/AIDS and other health-related information campaigns.

For example, on June 27, Mayor Adrian Fenty and the D.C. Department of Health director Gregg Pane announced an initiative to reduce the spread of HIV/AIDS among city youth. The mayor's goal is to increase by 25 percent the number of teenagers getting tested for HIV infection. Characteristically, the three-year campaign did not seek youth or parent suggestions on how best to reach its target -- DC's teenagers, who scoff at the mayor's focus on abstinence and revising the kindergarten curriculum to include HIV education.

The teenagers think the mayor is wrong on both counts. "I don't think the campaign will do a good job," said 17-year-old Whitney Powell, a student at Banneker Senior High School. "You have to make sure you're reaching the young people through the media they use. If these campaigns are directed towards youth why not include the suggestions of youth on how best to reach them."
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fighthivindc

David Mariner

posted 8/20/07 @ 11:02 AM EST

Thanks for posting this and raising awareness of HIV in DC. Find out more about how you can fight HIV in DC at:

http://www.fighthivindc.org

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