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HIV/AIDS IS NOT A GAY DISEASE, SAYS DR. MATHIAS OFRE

Published 11 February, 2021

Basseterre

Buckie Got It, St. Kitts and Nevis News Source

HIV/AIDS IS NOT A GAY DISEASE, SAYS DR. MATHIAS OFREBasseterre, St. Kitts, February 11, 2021 (SKNIS): Dr. Mathias Ofre, St. Kitts & Nevis National HIV/AIDS Programme Coordinator said that HIV/AIDS is not a gay disease because it does not discriminate with respect to a person’s sexual orientation.  

Dr. Ofre was at the time speaking on the radio and television show “Working for You” on February 10, 2021.

“Straight individuals can get infected,” he said. “That’s why we said that having unprotected vaginal or anal sex, could predispose an individual to be infected. It is not just for the gay population.”  

The National HIV/AIDS Programme Coordinator said education about the disease is done to reduce stigma and discrimination. He said that appearing on programmes such as “Working for You” helps people to develop an awareness that HIV is not a death sentence.

“People, before now, rated it to be a death sentence because there was not much information about it,” he said. “If you don’t know much about anything you get overwhelmed. Right now, there is so much information in terms of how to manage, how to prevent, and how to live a productive life with all the treatments available.”

There are treatments that will help boost up an infected person’s CD4 count so that the virus is undetectable. He added that the infection is still present, but it is so low that a person can still live a productive life.

“Even if a mother is HIV positive, we have the antiviral treatment that we administer to prevent the transmission of that HIV virus to the unborn child,” said Dr. Ofre.

Lucine Pemberton-Vaughan, Health Educator/Counsellor, who also appeared on the show, said that in terms of stigma and discrimination, persons have moved away from labelling men who have sex with men, and also labelling sex workers. She said that sex workers because of their trade are usually more conscious in having protective sex.  

“We have moved away from the labels because it is not so much the men who have sex with men, it has to do with the risky behaviour and one of such is anal sex. That can happen in a heterosexual relationship. It is because of the anus. The skin there is thinner and breaks easily and there is the presence of blood. So it is not for the individual itself, but it has to do with the practices.” She said that in having anal sex, adequate lubrication should be applied.

DR. MATHIAS OFRE, NATIONAL HIV/AIDS PROGRAMME COORDINATOR

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