|
U.S. News Getting His Message Out by Hook or by CrookOctober 16, 2009 No one will ever mistake Dwyane Lawson-Brown for just another AIDS educator. He is the after-school coordinator for Metro TeenAIDS in Washington, D.C., yes, but there is also his dreadlocks and after-hours careers in break-dancing and poetry reading. And then there is the hobby that consumes him, his self-proclaimed "side hustle," crocheting. It is not his only way of connecting with inner-city teens and others with his AIDS prevention message, but it is definitely his most disarming. The hobby helps put at ease people who might be frightened by, as he puts it, "a black man with dreadlocks." "Really, how hard are you? You're crocheting," he explained. Lawson-Brown can turn out a scarf in a few days of commuting on Washington's Metro. Hats and bowties are in his repertoire as well. But reaching the city's youth is his passion. He started with Metro TeenAIDS ten years ago as a volunteer peer educator, and now nurtures the next generation of teens to carry on the AIDS prevention fight. He has a cadre of peer educators who urge teens to get screened for HIV, use condoms, and think about their futures. With the District having some of the highest HIV infection rates in the nation, "I'm starting to realize that some people think it's not their issue," Lawson-Brown said. "That it's only gay people or young people. Everybody puts it off their plate." Washington Post 10.12.2009; John Kelly This article was provided by U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is a part of the publication CDC HIV/Hepatitis/STD/TB Prevention News Update. Visit the CDC's website to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
|
|