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Here you will find news and events about positivefriends.com - as well as news about HIV, HPV, Herpes, Hepatitis, and AIDS. I’ll also be posting random other health and technology news that I find interesting.
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Friday
23Nov2007

PositiveFriends.com TRUSTe Certified

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A major cornerstone of PositiveFriends.com is our members privacy.  We will always keep our user information completely confidential, and will not share it with anyone. Recently we have even gotten our privacy policy and website certified by TRUSTe.

TRUSTe is a third party privacy certification company that comes in and reviews positivefriends.com, paying special attention to our privacy policy.  TRUSTe then makes any requirement changes we need to make; and once those are done, certifies that we are doing everything humanly possible to secure and maintain our members privacy.truste_seal_web.gif

Just another important aspect that differentiates us from our competitors!

Wednesday
21Nov2007

MetroFunk Launch Party

metrofunk.jpgMy friend Adam’s company, metrofunk.com, had an amazing launch party the other night.  Looks like they had everyone there: micky avalon, ashellee simpson, Pete Wentz, Travis McCoy, etc etc… I personally like the yellow Lamborghini parked in front of the red carpet.  Metrofunk is a trendsetter website, and have some amazing technology behind their community - which is growing fast.   Check out this video of the party - off the hook!

Saturday
17Nov2007

Sex::Tech 2008

sextec.jpgA few weeks ago I was reading about Sex::Tech, an STD/HIV prevention conference focusing on youth and technology.  As PositiveFriends.com is all about sexual education and awareness through technology and new media, I thought this would be an excellent conference to attend.

The conference is January 22 - 23, 2008 and is hosted at SFSU’s Institute for Next Generation Internet, San Francisco, CA.  From what I undertsand, this is their first conference, and are looking to expand it with each year. 

I’ll be presenting on a the topic of Social Marketing in a Digital Era.  Discussions will include finding innovative ways to expand social awareness to STDs; including utilizing current social networks, mobile, and iTV.  I will be discussing new ways of creating social marketing campaigns (ie. Buckle Up or Think Positive) for the web generation.

 If you can make the conference, I think it would be a worthy journey.

Wednesday
14Nov2007

From NYT: Sex Diseases Still Rising - Chlamydia Is Leader

nytlogo.jpgThis was an article in the New York Times on November 14th, 2007.  While Positive Friends doesn’t deal specifically with Chlamydia, we do support all types of STDs - focusing on Herpes, Genitial HPV, Hepititis, and HIV.

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The incidence of gonorrhea, which had declined sharply, has risen in the last two years in this country while the number of chlamydia and syphilis cases continue to rise, federal health officials said yesterday.

Chlamydia and gonorrhea are the two most common diseases among those doctors must report in the United States. And the 1,030,911 cases of chlamydia in 2006 are the highest ever recorded for any nationally reported disease in any year, the officials said in releasing their annual report on sexually transmitted diseases. They said that because of underreporting, a more accurate estimate is 2.8 million new chlamydia cases annually.

About 19 million new cases of all kinds of sexually transmitted diseases occur in this country each year, but only the three are nationally reported. Genital herpes, papillomavirus and trichomonas infections account for the vast majority of cases, but doctors are not required to report them nationally.

Different reasons account for the rise of each of the three reportable and curable diseases, and for each a different approach is needed to reduce its incidence, Dr. John M. Douglas Jr., head of the division of sexually transmitted diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told reporters by telephone.

The three reported sexually transmitted diseases affect African-Americans disproportionately. The black to white ratios are gonorrhea 18 to 1, syphilis 6 to 1 and chlamydia 8 to 1, Dr. Douglas said in an interview. The reasons for the disparities are not clear. Lack of access to health care may be one problem.

“Chlamydia is now the most common S.T.D. ever reported,” Dr. Douglas said, but not by much. The next most common is gonorrhea, with just over one million cases reported each year from 1976 to 1980. The peak for gonorrhea was 1,013,00. Gonorrhea cases then declined steadily.

The chlamydia microbe can cause pelvic inflammatory disease and resulting abdominal pain, ectopic pregnancy and infertility in women.

Chlamydia’s rise in incidence is due mainly to urging by the centers for annual testing of sexually active women under age 26. Current tests are more sensitive in detecting chlamydia than those used a few years ago. Most cases were among women who had no symptoms but could transmit the microbe.

Chlamydia screening has led to detection of the microbe among more men as their female partners advise them to get tested and treated to avoid re-infections. Infected individuals are advised to get re-tested about three months after treatment to make sure they are cured.

The centers are also encouraging doctors to give antibiotics and educational material to patients to give to their sexual partners who are reluctant to seek care. One aim of the practice, called expedited partners therapy, is to reduce re-infections. The practice is legal in 11 states and ambiguous or illegal in the 39 others.

From 1975 through 1997 the reported rate of gonorrhea dropped 74 percent, then plateaued, only to rise the last two years to 358,366 cases in 2006. The centers estimate that at least twice that number actually occurred.

Much of the rise seems the result of an increasing tendency to couple gonorrhea and chlamydia testing of urine samples.

African-Americans account for 69 percent of all gonorrhea in this country. “The biggest increase in gonorrhea regionally has been in the South, and we do not have a ready explanation for that,” Dr. Douglas said.

Even in the days before penicillin became available in World War II to cure syphilis, the number of reported syphilis cases peaked at 575,000, and that total included individuals who never could be treated and developed the late stages of the disease that cause brain and heart damage.

Syphilis cases dropped to their lowest ever total in 2000 soon after health officials had announced a national syphilis elimination program.

But cases have risen each year since then to 9,756 cases in 2006. Most cases have involved gay men, who account for about 65 percent of cases, and to a lesser extent women. Also, a small number of cases have occurred among newborns.

Recently, health departments have had to take on more projects with little, if any, increase in budgets, Dr. Douglas said. Outbreaks have occurred in some areas where they were well controlled. Also, health workers have had to decrease partner notification programs and screening in detention centers and jails.

Monday
29Oct2007

Living and Dating with Herpes - Newsday Article

news-Newsday.pngThis was a great article from Newsday that I saw today. Talks about living and dating with herpes.

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Do ask, do tell: Broaching the subject of STDs

BY PAT BURSON

pat.burson@newsday.com

October 29, 2007

After dating his current boyfriend for two months, Craig knew it was time to broach a difficult conversation.

“When we were about to get intimate, I said, ‘I need to let you know something about me,’” says Craig, 34, of Shirley. “I said, ‘I’m HIV positive.’”

It’s not the type of thing you necessarily want to hear when you’re about to get close to someone you’re dating. But whether you’re straight or gay, a teenager, college student, young adult, Baby Boomer or senior citizen, it’s all the same: Before you have sex, you should have a talk about sexually transmitted diseases if you want to protect yourself and your partner, say sex educators and dating experts.

Having that conversation is even more critical these days, when 1 in 5 Americans has genital herpes and 90 percent of them don’t know it, says Laura Berman, director of the Berman Center in Chicago, a health-care facility specializing in women’s sexual and reproductive health.

Berman cites a recent survey conducted by Harris Interactive for Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp., and the American Social Health Association, in which 28 percent of 1,900 respondents said they felt it was more taboo to talk about having genital herpes than about HIV (20 percent), mental illness (14 percent) or obesity (10 percent) with a sexual partner.



The ‘ick’ factor

“When you think about dating, there’s unfortunately this taboo built around it and there’s this ‘ick’ factor associated with it which is not as present with the other sexually transmitted diseases,” she said.

“It doesn’t really make sense, given that herpes is basically a skin condition, but I think people are particularly affected by the idea of herpes because there’s no cure for it…. It is basically just a skin condition that can be effectively managed through medication and safer sex practices.”

The Harris survey also showed that 61 percent of respondents who have genital herpes say that revealing their condition to partners was troubling to them.

Berman, who was a partner in the release of the survey, advises daters to get tested for genital herpes and other sexually transmitted diseases before they enter a new sexual relationship. If you’re already dating, she says, you might suggest that the two of you get tested together.

If you know you have an STD and you’re dating, be knowledgeable about your condition, Berman says. Then you’ll be able to explain your diagnosis and any symptoms you may have to a potential mate, as well as how your condition is being treated and any medications you’re taking.

She and others acknowledge that some people are apprehensive about revealing their STD condition, fearing the other person’s reaction.

She suggests raising the issue anyway - in natural conversation.

“You could say, ‘If I’m attracted to someone - and I’m definitely attracted to you - I make a point to talk about our STD history, and I want to share with you mine,’” Berman says.



Ask the question

And don’t assume that your date is going to come out and tell you he or she has an STD, says Karen Ross, chief program officer at Long Island Association for AIDS Care in Hauppauge.

“You should be bringing up the question,” she says.

Even then, she adds, you may not always get an honest answer. Therefore, Ross says, “proceed with caution” and keep your head. “A few minutes of pleasure can really cost you a lifetime of having to deal with HIV and some other diseases.”

STDs are not a first-date conversation topic, nor something you’d discuss on the phone, in an e-mail or in a letter, experts say. Instead, find a private place where you’d both be comfortable to talk, or bring it up while you’re doing something active, like taking a walk.

Craig - who asked that his last name not be used because he’s afraid of repercussions from people who don’t know of his condition - says he and his boyfriend were about to become intimate when he revealed he has HIV. He slowed things down, explained his diagnosis and how he is keeping healthy. “He said, ‘You’re not dying now, are you?’”

No, Craig said, but “I told him one day you may have to take care of me.’ I gave him the blunt of it, so he understood. I said, ‘If you don’t want to see me, I understand. If you want to be intimate, we have to use precautions.’ He said, ‘No problem.’”

Craig says it was stressful because he knew his boyfriend could have heard the news and walked away. Did he consider not telling? No, Craig says, because HIV can lead to AIDS, for which there still is no cure. “I consider that like killing someone,” he adds. “I’m firm on telling the person. You have to.”

If you’re concerned about how to bring up such a dicey topic, try asking some questions to gauge what the other person is thinking, says Don Gabor, a Brooklyn-based communications trainer and author of “How to Start a Conversation and Make Friends” (Fireside).

“You might try sending up some trial balloons in terms of the conversation. Get a sense of that person’s sensitivity to it,” he says.

If things are moving fast and furious, you might want to take a more direct approach, such as asking, “‘Do you have any health issues I should know about?’” he says. “If nobody’s forcing you to hop in the sack on the first date or second date … take it one date at a time, and just get to know the person on a comfortable level and a personal level. Then people will feel comfortable opening up with good and bad.”

If you’re newly dating and simply want to put the conversation on the table, casually bring it up, says Andrea Syrtash, the Manhattan host of ondating.tv, a Web-based dating-advice program.



Don’t do a monologue

“Invite the person into the conversation, so you’re not doing a monologue. Get his thoughts. Get her thoughts,” she says. “Your approach is going to affect the results, so approach it like, ‘Why shouldn’t I ask you this?’ This is a normal adult conversation. Don’t put a stigma around it. If someone freaks out or laughs and can’t handle it, good thing you found that out.”

If you, in fact, have an STD and want to tell the person you’re dating, be open and honest, Syrtash says, but avoid theatrics and melodrama.

“Don’t call the person and tell the person, ‘There is something I’ve got to tell you.’Don’t build it up to that huge moment. You’ve just added a lot of pressure,” she says.

“You could say, ‘I believe in open communication and this is something I just want to discuss should this relationship grow.’ If you make it a big deal it will be a big deal with a lot of pressure.”

If you’re uncomfortable talking about it, start the conversation by telling your partner that, she says. “It’s just a good lesson to connect with the people we’re dating in a really honest way. It’s OK to be a bit vulnerable. That helps to create intimacy.”

Next, give the other person time to absorb the news, Ross says. “Give them time to research on their own, or be able to have information that you could give them so that they can have time to process it.”

Prepare yourself for whatever the other person’s reaction might be, including one you don’t want to hear. In addition, recognize the other person’s right to decide about how - or even whether - to continue in the relationship.

“If they’re just in there for some fun, then obviously the risk might not be reasonable to that person,” Gabor says. “If the other person has a greater investment in the relationship, or if he or she doesn’t but wants to, then the person may say, ‘I can live with that.’”

No matter how the person reacts, or how you feel about how he or she may react, there is no excuse for keeping silent, experts agree.

“If you don’t trust this person enough to talk about it, why are you trusting him or trusting her enough to get into bed with them unprotected?” says Nicole Verdi, a social worker at Planned Parenthood of Nassau County.

“Silence is the worst thing because it could mean your life. Keeping quiet, not asking questions could mean you life. So why are you keeping quiet?”

Talking, Syrtash says, is “a win-win. You’re either going to get closer for talking about it because something’s not on your mind that’s distracting you, or … if the partner reacts poorly, judgmental, doesn’t want to listen, doesn’t want to communicate, it’s good you found that out because that’s probably not the partner you want to be with.”

Copyright © 2007, Newsday Inc.