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WELL I WAS THINKING AND I THINK KIDS IN HIGHSCHOOL SHOULD GET TESTED EVERY YEAR FOR AIDS BECAUSE ONE OF THE MAIN REASONS IT IS SPREADING IS BECAUSE PEOPLE DONT KNOW THEY HAVE IT SO IF EVERYONE GOT TESTED WHEN THEY WERE YOUNGER THEY COULD GET TREATMENT SOONER SO THEY COULD LIVE LONGER AND THEY WOULDNT SPREAD IT.. WHAT DO YOU GUYS THINK???

2006-12-06 12:37:55 · 17 answers · asked by ladythugstar 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions STDs

17 answers

That would be a huge help if people in countries where AIDS is flourishing actually went to high school. But, in Africa and Indonesia, many young people don't.

Though you are right, with regard to America, at least. State governments could perhaps require AIDS tests with regular college student vaccinations. That's a great idea.

2006-12-06 12:42:37 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Dr. Robert Janssen, director of HIV-AIDS prevention at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said the CDC will re-evaluate its guidelines over the next two years, and will consider the study's findings as well as the availability of new, rapid HIV tests that produce results in a half-hour instead of the usual week or two.

Who would bear the cost of expanded testing — and the cost of the treatment, which runs to at least $15,000 a year — remains a sticky question amid government cutbacks in health-care funding. However, Janssen said the studies' findings could lead to some private insurers to encourage more HIV testing.

One of the studies, by researchers at Duke and Stanford universities and the Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, estimated that routine one-time testing of everyone would cut new infections each year by just over 20 percent, and that every HIV-infected patient identified would gain an average of 11/2 years of life.

2006-12-06 12:43:09 · answer #2 · answered by Mark B 4 · 1 0

How do you plan on paying for all this testing? Granted, it's not a bad idea, but where's the $$$ going to come from?

Next, you're speaking of possible Invasion of Privacy. As a parent, I do not want the whole school, town, city, nation, world ... knowing that my child (or me if I were younger) has (or does not have) the desease! This is our business and no one elses!

As a parent, perhaps it would be a good thing for parents of 'active' children to look into! However, making it a law or an accepted practice could be very wrong!

If testing were free and there was privacy ... maybe!

Work on this some more!

IMHO,

The Ol' Sasquatch Ü

2006-12-06 12:48:20 · answer #3 · answered by Ol' Sasquatch 5 · 0 1

That is an interesting view. Not one youngster are likely to endorse though. I really think the problem that exist now, being that kids thing it can't happen to them would get in the road. To bad because if kids were to take this possibility seriously then the problem could be controlled & fewer kids would have to ever get the disease.

2006-12-06 12:45:56 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

in the beginning, no person spreads AIDS. human beings unfold HIV, which in maximum circumstances develops into AIDS later on. Secondly, I believe the guy who stated that's like whilst Hitler made Jewish human beings placed on the famous individual of David on their clothing. And, tattoos carry hazards themselves. a individual can settlement distinctive viruses or micro organism from getting a tattoo, like hepatitis, HIV, staph an infection and others. The ingredients in tattoo ink at the instant are not FDA authorized. Who knows what's in it! i think of a extra lifelike and extra suitable thought might to no longer have intercourse with somebody except you know their STD status. Make an afternoon of it and bypass and get examined mutually. human beings have an inclination to easily bounce in mattress with somebody previously they actually know them or their sexual history. that's much less complicated to handle issues up front, then handling an incurable STD that would have been combating with the help of having examined interior the 1st place. Take care!

2016-10-14 04:25:50 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I think you should take your CAPS LOCK off (please)....and I think that since the disease is more prevalent in adults, that testing kids yearly probably wouldn't have much effect.

People should take more steps to protect themselves though, and get tested regularly if they are sexually active and not in a monogamous relationship with someone they know to be disease free.

2006-12-06 12:40:52 · answer #6 · answered by . 7 · 1 0

if you are saying that testing should be mandatory for all high schoolers, no, i wouldn't agree with that. yes, there are people that are spreading it around because they do not know that they are infected. however, even if they did know, do you really think that would stop them from having unprotected sex? no. the solution is for people to always have protected sex. that's it. not only that, but high school aged people are not really a huge high risk category.

2006-12-06 12:45:19 · answer #7 · answered by redpeach_mi 7 · 0 1

HIGHSCHOOL what thats late, was in the paper that the 7th graders went to washington dc and got sent home for having orgys. I know girls that lost their stuff in 6th grade. AIDS will be here forever and will teach the public on sleeping around and being a whore.

2006-12-06 12:40:35 · answer #8 · answered by shage 2 · 0 2

I think that is an ok and realistic idea.

But I think even better would be to set the example and give the education and advice to avoid AIDS by only having sex with one person--one's spouse.

2006-12-06 12:40:56 · answer #9 · answered by Einsteinetta 6 · 1 1

I think you should turn off your caps lock key ;-)

Many people would consider it an invasion of privacy.
Would it be mandatory testing?
Who would enforce it?
How?
What would the punishment be for refusal to submit to testing?
Who would pay for it?

2006-12-06 12:56:11 · answer #10 · answered by My Evil Twin 7 · 0 1

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