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‘Rubber Revolution’ to fight AIDS in Washington

Published: 26 November, 2010, 21:30
Edited: 27 November, 2010, 00:48

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TAGS: Politics, Sex, History, USA, Kristine Frazao


The Washington DC Department of Health has launched a new campaign being dubbed by officials as “The Rubber Revolution.”

When you hear revolution you think change,” said Dr. NnemdiKamanu-Elias, the Senior Deputy Director for the HIV/AIDS Hepatitis Tuberculosis and STD Administration (HAHSTA) within the Washington DC Deptarment of Health.

In a city where 3 percent of people are HIV positive, a higher rate than any other city in the country, Elias said change is needed.

We’re having ads on TV, on the radio. Mixed media, Facebook, Twitter, on the sides of buses.We have text messaging.People can text and ask for where free condoms are they can go get it,” she said.

Their website uses bold in-your-face 70’s style lettering, urging people to use condoms. You can even take the quiz to see what kind of condom you are, and send in videos about the Rubber Revolution.

Meanwhile, the Washington DC Police Department is not necessarily on the same page. Several people arrested for being sex workers in this city said the police told them they simply had too many condoms on their person to be just another person out to get lucky.

So why, when everyone knows people should have safe sex, aren’t they?

Dr. Elias said they conducted surveys and the most common excuses were that, “People think they’re too big, condoms will be tight, and we’re addressing that. People think it will spoil the moment and our ads address that as well. People think it shows that they don’t trust their partner. And we try to address that as well.”

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Lu November 27, 2010, 23:18
0

The HIV rate in DC is 3% but Moscow, Russia it is >20%.  How did you forget to mention this?  ... because RT is pure anti-American propaganda courtesy of the Kremlin.

Andrew November 27, 2010, 04:17
0

Encouraging people to practice safe sex is great, and being aware of the cultural stigma to get over is important, but while this effort may slightly help decrease the instances of immune deficiency acquired through repeated STD infections, they won't put a dent in the majority of immune deficiency that comes about through the use of immune-suppresive drugs.

Nor will it help the families of all those who died young of liver failure from being mis-diagnosed with anti-viral drugs after taking a useless test that looks for a set of antibodies and normal human proteins in the bloodstream.

If people would stop chasing after Robert Gallo's disproven fraudulent claims, and applying false labels to the starvation crisis in africa, then we might begin to make some headway in the 'war against aids'.