Commentaries
As I observe AIDS and HIV diseases are transferable by sexual contact but world can stop it by using condom or any thing that can support your health and by stopping the prostitution on the world and having sex with safeties.
To be prostitutes may affect their lives by means of diseases. Prostitutes may experience a lifetime of current illnesses, such as sexually transmitted disease, fertility problems, pregnancy complication, malnutrition’s, tuberculosis and depression it is based on my research to the prostitutes that known me.
The teenager that having this job involved in the sex trade face new and potentially fatal dangers in light of the spread of HIV and AIDS.
There’s some solution to this problems of our country, safe houses for teenagers who are lacked of houses to be field, free education and training for the parents for the life of the teenagers, healing of sexual and physical abuse, we need the psychiatrist to be young abuse, treatment for substances abuse issues that’s also I told before this sentences, socioeconomics alternative for kids who are homeless or in desperately unsafe conditions and media exposure.
HIV and AIDS are kinds of disease that we are going to disappear in our body because these diseases are very harmful in the body. And we have to do the safety way or having a safety thing like condoms or other contra diseases.
Having sex with others are not safe even your husband or your wife and now a days not only a exact age are having sex with homosexual or heterosexual intercourse but also the teenager that’s why now we have to find a solution in different kind of diseases were having.
Synopsis
The HIV epidemic has been spreading steadily for the past two decades, and now affects every country in the world. Each year, more people die and the number of people living with HIV continues to rise – in spite of the fact that we have developed many proven HIV prevention methods. We now know much more about how HIV is transmitted than we did in the early days of the epidemic, and we know much more about how we can prevent it being transmitted.
One of the key means of HIV prevention is education – teaching people about HIV: what it is, what it does, and how people can protect them. Over half of the world’s population is now under 25 years old. This age group is more threatened by AIDS than any other; equally it is the group that has more power to fight the epidemic than any other. Education can help to fight HIV, and it must focus on young people.
The problem seems to stem from the fact that HIV is often sexually transmitted, or is transmitted via drug use. Any subject that concerns sex between young people or drug use tends to be seen from a moralistic perspective. Many adults – particularly those of the religious right – believe that teens need to be prevented from indulging in these high-risk activities. They believe that young people shouldn’t – and don’t need to be – provided with any education about these subjects, other than to be told that they are ‘wrong’, and not to do such things. Unfortunately, however, adults have been trying to stop young people from having sex and taking drugs for many, many years with little success, so this method alone seems unlikely to offer any real relief in terms of the global AIDS epidemic.
There are other difficulties in taking an exclusively moral approach to HIV education. Firstly, this is what tends to perpetuate stigmatization of HIV+ people. By teaching young people that indulging in ‘immoral’ sex and drugs will lead to HIV infection, educators imply that anyone who is HIV+ is therefore involved in these ‘immoral’ activities. This stigmatization tends to make people reluctant to be tested for HIV, and therefore more inclined to remain ignorant of their status – and perhaps go on to infect others. AIDS education shouldn’t ever include a moral judgment – it is one thing to teach young people that promiscuous sex and intravenous drug use are unsafe, another thing to teach them that these things are morally wrong.
Thursday, May 7, 2009
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