The AIDS Prevention Group (GPsida),
a network of volunteer health advocates, is seeking to change attitudes towards
AIDS and being HIV-positive to reduce infection rates in Cuba. GPsida’s ninth
National Scientific Event was held in Havana June 6-8.
“People are having sex without
protection, because they don’t care if they get infected,” said Jorge Brito of
GPsida. “Fear of HIV/AIDS has been lost.”
In Cuba, the government covers 97
percent of treatment free of cost in the country’s 16 provinces. More specific
studies are needed to find out what proportion of new infections come from
contact with people known to be HIV-positive and whether or not they are
“intentional” or “non-intentional,” according to experts Angela Gala and Yasel
M. Santiesteban, of the state-run Pedro Kouri Institute for Tropical Medicine.
Gala and Santiesteban reported on a
study of attitudes of HIV-positive Cubans called “Survey of People with
HIV/AIDS, 2009: A Tool for Action.” Of those asked about how they acquired the
virus, 0.5 percent said they “wanted to be infected”; 15.8 percent had believed
they were not at risk; and 13.2 percent said “fate had played them a bad turn.”
The study, published in 2011, found
the leading risk factor was “not using a condom during sexual relations.” For
that reason, educating people about safe sex continues to be one of GPsida’s
main objectives.
Cuba has an infection rate of 0.18
percent in the 15-49 age group, considered “exceptionally low” by the UN.
Carlos Aragonés, GPsida’s founder and national coordinator, said that “very
personalized work needs to be done” to reduce the number of new cases annually.
The Friends of AIDS Foundation is
dedicated to enhancing the quality of life for HIV positive individuals and
empowering people to make healthy choices to prevent the spread of the HIV
virus. To learn more about The Friends of AIDS Foundation, please visit: http://www.friendsofaids.org.
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