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BEIJING, Dec. 8 (Xinhuanet) -- Experts are
calling for additional safe sex education based on the family unit to curb the
country's growing AIDS crisis.
The effects of AIDS are being felt more and more throughout families, said Jin Jun, a professor from Tsinghua University yesterday at the World Family Summit.
From a worldwide perspective, nearly half of the 39.4
million people living with HIV/AIDS are women, and at least 25 million children
and young adults are severely affected by the disease, said Jin.
In China, the proportion of infected women has
increased from 10 per cent in the 1980s to the current 41 per cent, he added.
These women, many of whom are infected by their
husbands, usually transmit the virus to their children, creating a vicious
circle.
Gender inequality results in poor education among
women, scarce possibilities to practice safe sex, and little access to
treatment, which in turn have fueled the spread of HIV infections, said Jin.
While in China the spotlight is on educating
high-risk groups including intravenous drug users, prostitutes, gays and
blood-sellers, the professor said those high-risk groups are made of individuals
who still have families or had families in the past.
In this sense, he said it is a must to educate
families to become self-protective when dealing with AIDS.
It is much more difficult to stop sexual transmission
between husband and wife than mother to child, so people's notions about safe
sex must be changed through education, said Jin.
We also need to create mechanisms to train families
to cope with the impact of the disease, especially in the realm of home-based
care, he said.
Sikiratou Adeothy Koumakpai, a professor from Benin,
echoed those thoughts during the summit. He said the country has seen a
successful drop of HIV/AIDS victims from 4 per cent to 2 per cent through
effective programmes integrating the government, non-governmental organizations
and families.
He said it is best to ensure every infected person is
still closely linked to and supported by family, she said.
Families should also be better educated in AIDS
prevention.
Considering that 7.4 per cent of HIV carriers in
China are below 19 years of age, Wang Zhenyu, a professor from the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, said parents should give their children a
diaper-to-dating sex education rather than dodging the topic.
Current sex education in China focuses on
physiological changes but ignores safe sex, said Wang.
Basic knowledge on contraception and self-protection
from sexual abuse is seldom taught to children by their parents and even
schools.
So, a lot of young people get access to the so-called
knowledge from some sources which contain pornographic information.
The age of adolescence among Chinese youth today is
one year younger than that in the 1980s, said Jin. But the education usually
starts in high schools, later than it should.
The last 10 years have witnessed great changes in
notions about sex, including an increasing number of pre-marital pregnancies and
abortions, according to the National Population and Development Report issued in
September.
(China Daily)
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