Sun.Star Davao

Aids treatment not popular among youths

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TREATMENT for Human Immunodefi­ciency Virus and Acquired Immuno-Deficiency Syndrome (HIV-Aids) is not popular among the youth, this holds true in the Department of Health study that revealed that a huge number of teenager from 1519 years do not have access to Anti-Retroviral Therapy (ART).

Based on HIV/Aids and ART Registry of the Philippine­s, August 2017 in access to ART by age from January 1984-August 2017, there were 5,913 estimated Persons Living with Human Immunodefi­ciency Virus (PLHIV) under the “15 to 19 years of age”, of this number 198 are actually diagnosed, and only 239 or 4% are alive and on ART.

According to data, among the 15-to-19-yearMANILA olds who access ART, 35 percent are working, 33 percent are students, and 32 percent are working.

This little percentage of the access to treatment is reflected on the data that only 3 percent of the 15-17-yearolds among Male having Sex with Male (MSM) are aware on the treatment of HIV.

Same data revealed that 8 percent of 18-24 year-olds, and 13 percent for 25 years old are aware of available HIV treatment.

But this accessing to ART percentage is low despite the increasing percentage on awareness to public health facilities offering HIV services.

Data revealed that MSMs under 15-17 year-old bracket, 26 percent are aware of public

health facilities offering HIV services, those who are under 18-24 age bracket are more aware of these facilities with 38 percent, but 25 years old and older topped the highest percentage of awareness with 44 percent. It can be noted that this awareness to public health is also much smaller compared to the knowledge on how HIV is transmitte­d and prevented among the age groups.

The same informatio­n revealed that among the 15-17 year-old MSMs, 31 percent knows how is HIV transmitte­d and prevented, in 18-24 age bracket, 39 percent knows about it too, while age 25 years old and older have much higher knowledge on transmissi­on and prevention with 44 percent, same level as their awareness to facilities. Data also revealed that condom use during last sex across MSM age groups is also low, not reaching up to 50 percent.

Across MSM age groups, 27 percent of 15-17 years old are using condoms, 41 percent of 18-19 years old are using condoms, 44 percent of 20-24 years old, and 46 percent of 25 years old and above are using condoms.

According to the same data more than 60 percent of 15-17 years old MSMs said that condoms are not easy to get in their community, almost 60 percent also said they are embarrasse­d to buy condoms and more than 60 percent of those who are in the same age group did not buy or receive condoms. KVC (For full story visit www.sunstar.com.ph/ davao/)

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