Realmhealthy - More than two million young people aged 10 to 19 years of living with HIV. Adolescents are particularly vulnerable to the risk of HIV infection and died from causes associated with it. For the first time, WHO makes recommendations to better adapt to the fight against HIV services for this age group.
"I want to understand what the health worker told me and more aware of my HIV infection," wrote one of the teenagers who live in Jamaica.
"It's my consent to be considered, not from my parents. We should be able to make a test screening younger," wrote another young woman in Zimbabwe.
"I think our lack of information tailored to young people on HIV treatment and side effects. In addition, health care providers and young people should reflect together on a specific timetable for our health care, because our expectations and our needs are different from adults, "said one teenager in Mexico.
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Most Matches against HIV Services for Youth
Young people living with HIV and dozens of others around the world have expressed their concerns and the challenges they face in a series of surveys conducted by the WHO in 2011 and 2012. The answers they reveal that in many countries and the environment, young people do not have adequate access to testing, counseling and treatment of HIV services.
Today more than two million young people aged 10 to 19 living with HIV. On the occasion of World AIDS Day 2013 (December 1), the WHO has stressed the urgent need to better adapt the fight against HIV services for adolescents.
The mortality rate among HIV-positive adolescents not detract contrary to what is observed in other populations. While worldwide the number of HIV-related deaths fell by 30% overall between 2005 and 2012, an increase of 50% in adolescents during the same period.
"It is important that the country is currently improving services for youth because over the next decade many children infected with HIV at birth will enter adolescence. In addition to physical changes and emotional ups and downs associated with the transition from childhood to adulthood, teenagers must face difficulties of living with a chronic infection, the news to relatives and prevent contagion, "said Jane Ferguson, a scientist in WHO's Department of Health of mothers, newborns, children and adolescents.
New Guidelines On HIV And Teens
In November, WHO issued HIV and adolescents: Guidelines for HIV testing and counseling and treatment for adolescents living with HIV - the first guidelines on the special needs of adolescents living with HIV. In this publication, the WHO recommends that the government review their policy on licensing access to services for young people to get tested for HIV without consent of their parents. It also shows how health care can improve the quality of care and social support for adolescents living with HIV.
The approach is very fertile is to provide treatment and care for HIV infection, providing additional support for teens. A recent study in Zimbabwe, published in the journal AIDS, found that young people in 1776 who had received treatment in the context of such a program, not more likely to die from HIV-related illness than adults, in contrast to the general trend in South Africa and in the world.
Young people who responded to the survey WHO clearly shows that being in a health care setting among their peers - and interaction with health care providers, including their unique problem - to change the situation at all.
"It was easy to go to the clinic," wrote a young woman from Kenya in response to the WHO survey. "One day is devoted to teens who received either by health care providers."
Therefore those of us who are still relatively young age very necessary for health in order to be maintained and do not do free association so that we avoid the most dangerous viruses and deadly namely HIV. Hopefully useful healthy greetings.
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