Former Surgeon General David Satcher Calls for "ABC+Hope" Approach to HIV Prevention in United StatesMay 27, 2004 Former Surgeon General David Satcher on Monday at a national conference on sexual health issues in Washington, D.C., said that the United States should adopt the "Abstinence, Be faithful or use Condoms" approach to HIV prevention but should add a component of "hope," the Advocate reports (Advocate, 5/25). High school sex educators, teen sexual abstinence advocates, academics, religious figures, representatives from gay and lesbian groups and a conservative talk show host attended the conference, titled "The Call to Action on Sexual Health: Science and Belief -- Seeking Common Ground," according to the Springfield News-Sun (Nesmith, Springfield News-Sun, 5/26). Satcher said that the "ABC+Hope" approach to HIV/AIDS prevention could "provide the basis for a common-ground approach through which people with divergent views can overcome political gridlock and address issues" related to teen pregnancy, sex education and sexually transmitted diseases -- including HIV/AIDS, according to the Advocate (Advocate, 5/25). Satcher said that "any domestic version of an ABC approach must be expanded to also address the sense of hopelessness that too often leads many people to engage in high-risk sexual behavior" (Morehouse School of Medicine release, 5/24). "If you get an environment where young people don't feel like they have a lot of hope for the future, whether it's drugs or violence or sex, they look it at in a different way," Satcher said, adding, "A child who doesn't feel he or she's going anywhere is not willing to give up even a momentary pleasure" (Springfield News-Sun, 5/26).
Openly Discussing Sex Back to other news for May 27, 2004
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report.
|