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HIV Screening Should Be Offered As Part Of Routine Medical Care, Even For Teens

In 2006 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated that 1.1 million people were living with HIV, 4.4% of whom were 13 to 24 years old, and 48% of those youth are unaware they are infected. Using the Youth Risk Behavioral Survey (YRBS) data from 2007, the CDC estimated that about 12.9% of high school students had been tested for HIV.

The good news is that the highest risk teens were the ones getting tested more often, but only 22% of the highest risk teens had been tested.

To decrease the number of undiagnosed HIV infections among adolescents and promote HIV prevention, the CDC recommends that healthcare providers offer HIV screening as part of routine medical care for all people ages 13 to 64. People at high risk should be tested every year, including:

  • Injection drug users;
  • Anyone who exchanges sex for money or drugs;
  • Sex partners of people with HIV;
  • Men who have sex with men;
  • Heterosexual people who have more than one partner since their most recent HIV test; and
  • Anyone who gets a sexually transmitted disease.

High schools can support that effort by including information about HIV testing in the health curricula. People familiar with the benefits and process of the testing and counseling are more likely to be tested.

For teens, I usually suggest they go to anonymous testing sites in their community to be testing, so that the test is not including in their medical record. The anonymity also gives them a little extra courage. The trick is that they cannot lose their test number for the two weeks they wait for results.

This post, HIV Screening Should Be Offered As Part Of Routine Medical Care, Even For Teens, was originally published on Healthine.com by Nancy Brown, Ph.D..

Is AIDS The Forgotten Epidemic? Where Do McCain and Obama Stand On HIV/AIDS?

Photo Credit: CBS News

Photo Credit: CBS News

I have a friend who works with Katie Couric and he sent me this announcement today. You may be interested in tuning in tonight to hear more specifics about McCain and Obama’s views on HIV/AIDS in America. As for me, I’ll be attending a lecture about our two party system at the National Archives. Thank goodness for TiVo.

Tonight on the “CBS Evening News with Katie Couric,” Medical Contributor Dr. Sanjay Gupta reports on where each presidential candidate stands on AIDS in America.  There is a new infection every 9.5 minutes and an AIDS related death every 33 minutes with 1.2 million Americans who carry the virus.  Yet HIV / AIDS is America’s “forgotten epidemic,” as the nation spends almost $10 billion annually to fight AIDS abroad, but less than 10 percent of that here at home.  Dr. Gupta will explore how Senators McCain and Obama intend to stop the epidemic and how they plan to care for those living with this deadly disease.  For all the candidates answers, tune in tonight at 6:30 p.m. EST.

This is part of an ongoing weekly series of in-depth reports called “Where They Stand”  CBS News will continue to examine how each candidate proposes to solve America’s most pressing problems, from the economy to foreign policy to immigration to health care to education to energy to the environment to the country’s infrastructure to homeland security, among others.

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