Anybody Thats Having Sex NEEDS to Be Tested {Including Seniors}


Many people at risk for contracting HIV aren’t getting tested for the virus or being targeted for preventative efforts, because they are – in  one word, old.  Just Like anyone else, Those that think they are negative, be because they never had sex with a man or because they were tested before and had sex in between tests, not being in a monogamous relationship.  They need to be tested or tested again. Just like you go to the Dentist every six months for a cleaning, you should be testing …and now you can test yourself-  So There is no excuse.  You can do pay for it in the privacy of your home or do it free by going to a health non profit.  adamfoxie*
Research from a one-year-old study (PDF) produced by the Gay Men’s Health Crisis and presented at this year’s national Creating Change conference shows that the number seniors living with HIV and AIDS is growing — likely perpetuated by a lack of sex education for older adults combined with poor knowledge of seniors’ risky behavior.
People over 50 make up about one-third of all people living with HIV/AIDS, and that number is expected to grow to one-half by 2015, according to the report.

Photo: Part of New York City public awareness campaign about HIV testing (source: Imgur.com)
Generally, HIV-positive persons over 50 fall into three categories, explained Daniel Tietz, executive director of the AIDS Community Research Initiative of America (ACRIA), who presented this data along with three other researchers. These are: longtime HIV/AIDS survivors, newly diagnosed individuals, and newly infected individuals. The data suggests that longtime survivors make up the largest group; however the latter two groups are growing steadily.
According to the report, older women newly diagnosed with HIV generally become infected through unprotected heterosexual sex or injection drug use. For older men, homosexual sex is the likely cause of HIV infection, followed by injection drug use and heterosexual sex. The report notes that among people who are older than 50, African-Americans are 12 times as likely as white Americans to have HIV; Latinos are five times as likely.
Tietz said that data on people with HIV/AIDS is poorly collected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; the agency does not provide specific data broken down by age and risk category for older adults as it does for youth.
A group at the highest risk for HIV are transgender people, particularly transgender people of color, Tietz said. In part, he explained, it’s because transgender people have difficulty finding work due to discrimination; thus many turn to sex work. And until recently, he said, the CDC classified transgendered people as gay, effectively muddying the numbers of both communities.
Elizabeth Lovinger, a policy associate at the Gay Men’s Health Crisis, said that her organization has recommended that doctors make it a habit of offering cervical- and anal-cancer patients an HIV test, as those diseases could be an indicators of the virus.
“We need to be targeting behaviors instead of identities,” Lovinger said.
What Tietz wants to see happen is more doctors talking to their senior patients about their sex lives and drug habits – something he doesn’t think happens much now.
“The stereotype is that older people don’t have sex,” he said.
This stereotype was challenged last summer with an ACRIA-designed billboard campaign in New York City. Transit hubs were adorned with signs featuring older Americans — who appear to be nude — and the slogan “Have sex? Age is not a condom.” Tietz said the city council and the state aging office, which funded the project, didn’t want their names on the posters. Additionally, ACRIA was unable to put the signs near schools or churches, due to a city ordinance banning words like “sex” and “condoms” near those locations. Tietz said his organization is looking for ways to get around that loophole. Washington, D.C., might be seeing a similar campaign soon, he said.
A new study funded by the Health & Human Services in partnership with the Center on Halsted, examined social needs in aging adults with HIV in the Chicago area. The study found that HIV-positive seniors were more likely than HIV-negative peers to suffer from depression, substance abuse and financial hardships. Britta Larson, the center’s senior services director, who worked on the study, said participants were desperate for the $25 gift certificate that served as an incentive.
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