Glamorgan Gazette

Rugby legend urges people to take an HIV test

- JOSH GRAHAM Reporter echo.newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

WELSH rugby legend Gareth Thomas hopes the heightened awareness of viruses generated by the Covid-19 pandemic can help end the stigma of HIV and reluctance to get tested for the disease.

A survey commission­ed by the former dual-code internatio­nal’s Tackle HIV campaign revealed 84% of respondent­s said sexual health was a high or very high priority, but only 45% would consider getting tested for HIV and just 22% had tested previously.

That drop-off is something Thomas, 47, hopes to tackle head-on – and given the entire British population has got used to testing themselves for Covid over the past two years, he is adamant a shift in attitude towards viruses can enhance his quest to dispel the HIV taboo.

“Covid has put everything on the backburner, so many people weren’t going to get tested because everybody was concerned with Covid first and foremost and that seemed to be the only thing around.,” said Thomas, who is HIV-positive but lives a happy, healthy and normal life and thanks to medical advances – by taking one pill a day – will not transmit the virus sexually to his husband.

“Now we are hopefully, and thankfully, reaching the end of that – I’d like to think that people’s empathy towards viruses isn’t from fear or not wanting it to land on their doorstep.

“I really believe and hope that we can use Covid and the way that people tested, were treated and understood it as a way of engaging with people around all viruses and especially HIV.”

Amid rugby union’s Six Nations tournament, Tackle HIV – a public awareness and education initiative in partnershi­p with ViiV Healthcare and the Terrence Higgins Trust – has released the Sex of Our Nations report.

Over 6,000 adults across Wales, England, Scotland, Ireland, Italy and France were questioned, revealing the differing levels of acceptance surroundin­g sexuality and HIV.

Particular­ly frustratin­g for 2005 Grand Slam winner Thomas is the common misconcept­ion that those from background­s not traditiona­lly associated with HIV are not at risk of transmitti­ng the virus.

In fact, the survey revealed that in 2020, for the first time in 10 years, half of all new HIV diagnoses in England were in heterosexu­al people, which jars with the 28% of people polled who said they would not consider a HIV test as they believed they were not at risk.

Thomas, originally from Sarn, near Bridgend, added: “If they are not gay, a bisexual male or black African man or woman – which are the characteri­stics people assume are the only ones that live with HIV – then we understand that these people are not going to get tested because a lack of education means they feel they are not at risk.

“You realise it’s actually a problem and why HIV is still being transmitte­d. It’s such a simple process nowadays to get tested. It’s really important that everybody gets tested because for me the fear is not knowing your status.

“If you look at Covid, we’ve all gone through the process of testing ourselves weekly or daily for a virus, so we all understand the importance of doing it.

“So to do it once or twice a year or when you put yourself at risk [is not hard]. Most new infections are from people who don’t know their status, so people need to understand that if you don’t know it, then you should go and find out.”

The survey also exposes a shocking lack of acceptance in what are considered free and liberal European nations, with only 66% suggesting they were completely accepting of homosexual­ity.

“It’s really important that we realise what’s on our doorstep,” explained

Thomas. “Sometimes we think that if we don’t hear, see or come across discrimina­tion then it doesn’t exist.

“Maybe because you don’t speak about or don’t live your life with a certain characteri­stic – you’ve never come across it but sometimes it takes surveys like this for people to realise that it is there.

“Yet it’s really important that everybody feels like they are able to get the knowledge that will give them the power to join the conversati­ons, be allies and call people out for being needlessly discrimina­tive.”

 ?? ROB BROWNE ?? Gareth Thomas
ROB BROWNE Gareth Thomas

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