HIV POSITIVE YOUTH IN THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM XIX International AIDS Conference, Washington, DC July 26, 2012 Joyce Hunter, D.S.W. HIV Center for Clinical.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
No one left behind: Increased coverage, better programmes and maximum impact for key populations WHO Consolidated Guidelines on HIV Prevention, Diagnosis,
Advertisements

Risks, Rights & Health FINDINGS & RECOMMENDATIONS: Criminalisation of HIV Transmission, Exposure and Non-disclosure Commissioner Barbara Lee AIDS 2012,
Key Populations: Making Them Matter in the Global HIV Response Inextricable Links: HIV and Human Rights Kevin Osborne, LINKAGES Project Director 2 March.
1 Global AIDS Epidemic The first AIDS case was diagnosed in years later, 20 million people are dead and 37.8 million people (range: 34.6–42.3 million)
HIV/AIDS In The United States J.AD.DA.S. Table of Contents Epidemiology AIDS in the United States AIDS by ethnicity AIDS by exposure category AIDS deaths.
SPECIAL POPULATIONS Key Considerations for Youth.
+ Youth and Crime. + Beliefs... Society should concentrate on preventing crime and devoting more resources to the rehabilitation of young people who break.
GAP Report 2014 Prisoners People left behind: Prisoners Link with the pdf, Prisoners.
© Aahung 2004 Millennium Development Goals Expanding the Agenda:
Doing the Right Thing Karen A. Stanecki XV International AIDS Conference.
The HIV/AIDS Epidemic © 2005 John B. Pryor Illinois State University.
Helene Gayle Director, HIV, TB and Reproductive Health Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation HIV/AIDS in the African American Community: Confronting the Challenge.
GAP Report 2014 People left behind: Gay men and other men who have sex with men Link with the pdf, Gay men and other men who have sex with men.
People left behind: People living with HIV
Youth Advocate Program International nd St. NW, Suite 209 Washington DC 20016, USA Children Infected & Affected by HIV/ AIDS.
Are people living with HIV less likely to pass HIV to others if they are on treatment? Exploring the use of treatment as prevention James Wilton Project.
ADOLESCENT SEXUAL AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH. adolescent sexual and reproductive health ( 2 ) Adolescents are young people between the ages of 10 and 19.
Home economics 9th grade – 4th partial
I Have AIDS… On My Mind World AIDS Day - December 1.
Myths and Misconceptions
The HIV/AIDS Epidemic © 2013 John B. Pryor Illinois State University.
Adolescents and HIV: Rates, Risk and Intervention Opportunities
African Americans and HIV: CA Office of AIDS Response Michelle Roland, MD Chief, Office of AIDS California Department of Public Health.
Chapter 21 Preview Bellringer Key Ideas What Are HIV and AIDS?
1 AIDS 2010 Vienna, July 2010 HIV/AIDS and People from Countries where HIV is endemic – Black people of African and Caribbean descent living in Canada.
4. HIV/AIDS in Africa Takashi Yamano Development Issues in Africa Spring 2007.
“A VISION OF HOPE” EXPERIENCE OF SENEGAL IN THE FIGHT AGAINST AIDS AND REDUCING WOMEN’S VULNERABILITY Dr Khoudia Sow, CRCF, UMI 233 Dakar Sénégal.
HIV Prevention In The Workplace Stephen Bridges National AIDS Fund April 16, 2004 New Intervention Directions CAPS Conference.
Water Services Trust Fund HIV/ AIDS, STD’s and substance abuse 8/29/20151.
Lost Opportunities: The Reality of Latinos in the U.S. Criminal Justice System Nancy E. Walker J. Michael Senger Francisco A. Villarruel Angela M. Arboleda.
What are my rights? Source: Sex, Etc.
Prevention with Positives; Using Multiple Strategies to Involve Persons Living with HIV in Prevention. TASO Uganda. Emmanuel Odeke,
HIV-Infected Women: An Update June 28, 2007 Kathleen McDavid, PhD, MPH HIV Incidence and Case Surveillance Branch Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, CDC.
1 July 2008 e Global summary of the AIDS epidemic, December 2007 Total33 million [30 – 36 million] Adults30.8 million [28.2 – 34.0 million] Women15.5 million.
GAY MEN'S HEALTH CRISIS Homophobia and H.I.V. among gay and bisexual men in the U.S. CHAMP Forum Sean Cahill, Ph.D. Managing Director, Public Policy, Research.
Milwaukee Partnership to Respond to 2009 EPI AID Study in Milwaukee Brenda Coley Diverse and Resilient, Inc.
Special Prison Populations
HIV/AIDS BI-ANNUAL REVIEW 2008 Prevention -Goal, Indicators and Targets TACAIDS.
HIV/AIDS among Women in Texas Enhanced Perinatal Surveillance May 30, 2007 Nita Ngo, MPH.
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Using HIV Surveillance to Achieve High Impact Prevention Irene Hall, PhD, FACE AIDS 2012 High-Impact Prevention: Reducing the HIV Epidemic in the United.
Theodore M. Hammett, Ph.D. Sofia Kennedy, M.P.H. Drug Abuse and Risky Behaviors: The Evolving Dynamics of HIV/AIDS NIH-Bethesda, MD May 9, 2007 HIV/AIDS.
MEGAN MCLEMORE, J.D.,L.L.M. SENIOR RESEARCHER HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS DIVISION HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH Southern Exposure: HIV and Human Rights in the Southern.
The findings and conclusions in this presentation have not been formally disseminated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and should not.
Adolescent Reproductive Health. Adolescent Reproductive Health, USA 870,000 teens became pregnant in 1997 Just under 500,000 births 75-80% teen moms unmarried.
HIV/ AIDS Right now, 1 out of every 300 people in the United States has HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
Home economics 9 th grade – 4 th partial. Sexual education is instruction on issues relating to human sexualityincluding:  human sexual anatomy  sexual.
Methods Data for this NIDA-funded HIV prevention trial (Project WORTH) were drawn from 337 women offenders under community supervision, who reported using.
Greg Gabbert AIDS Alabama NATIONAL & LOCAL CAMPAIGN.
HIV & AIDS In Homosexuals By: Kristen Hopkins, Lizbeth Londono, & Marcela Morado.
Menarche Spermarche First intercourse First marriage First birth Intend no more children First.
Eastern European Alliance for Reproductive Choice REPRODUCTIVE CHOICE FOR HIV- INFECTED WOMEN Prof. POSOKHOVA S.P. UKRAINE УКРАЇНАУКРАЇНА.
HIV/AIDS and Gender: South African Women and the Spread of Infection.
DR. KANURPIYA CHATURVEDI Reproductive Health of Young Adults PART I DR KANURPIYA CHATURVEDI.
AIDS/HIV.
Adolescents/Young Adults and HIV John Nelson, PhD, CPNP July 31, 2014 Developed as part of the RCSB Collaborative Curriculum Development Program 2014.
00002-E-1 – 1 December 2001 Global summary of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, December 2001 Number of people living with HIV/AIDS Total40 million Adults37.2 million.
00002-E-1 – 1 December 2002 Global summary of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, December 2002 Number of people living with HIV/AIDS Total42 million Adults38.6 million.
Universal Opt-Out Screening for HIV in Health Care Settings, Cost Effectiveness in Action Douglas K. Owens, MD, MS VA Palo Alto Health Care System and.
HIV & AIDS Team 85 – Cardona. Information is vital As teenagers, you will be facing many new decisions in your life Understanding what can put you at.
HIV Prevention: A Winnable Battle Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
| Web: The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official.
AIDS in Adolescents and Youngsters Prof. Jorge Peláez Mendoza M.D. Prof. Jorge Peláez Mendoza M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology Department Obstetrics and.
Global Impact of HIV/AIDS Deborah Lewinsohn, M.D. Infectious Diseases, Pediatrics Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute Oregon Health & Science University.
HIV\AIDS Statistics Advanced Humanities Adkins. HIV HIV stands for human immunodeficiency virus. This is the virus that causes AIDS. HIV is different.
Linkages between Criminalization of HIV Transmission, Gender Inequalities and Human Rights, Nakuru, Kenya Author(s): Ndegwa Mutiga, Paul Moses 1 1 Ambassadors.
Dr. Monica Beg, Chief, HIV/AIDS Section, UNODC
Cedric Whitfield, MPH, CHES
HIV/AIDS.
National Programme for limiting spread of HIV/AIDS in Latvia 2008–2012
Presentation transcript:

HIV POSITIVE YOUTH IN THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM XIX International AIDS Conference, Washington, DC July 26, 2012 Joyce Hunter, D.S.W. HIV Center for Clinical and Behavioral Studies, New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University, New York

INCARCERATED YOUTH AT RISK There is a public health crisis among youth incarcerated in state custody. These youth are particularly at-risk for acquiring sexual transmitted infections (STIs)/HIV. (The Center for HIV Law and Policy, 2010) For youth who are incarcerated in foster care or detention facilities: Health care providers typically do not raise sexual health care issues with youth (i.e., STIs, HIV, unwanted pregnancy); Youth were not aware if they had been tested for HIV or, if they had, had not been given their test results.

INCARCERATED YOUTH AT RISK, cont. Female youth were not responded to when they requested appointments about sexual health care with agencies such as Planned Parenthood, or their appointments were delayed for months. Lack of information, conflicting information, and lack of confidentiality, were reported by youth. (Child Welfare League of America, 2006)

INCARCERATED YOUTH AT RISK, cont. Before coming into custody, many of these youth: were living on the streets, engaging in high-risk sexual behaviors for shelter, food, money, risk becoming victims of assault, increasing their chances of contracting STIs or HIV.

YOUTH OF COLOR The CDC and the National Institute of Justice find that incarcerated youth are disproportionately youth of color and disproportionately at risk for STIs and HIV. Among youth aged diagnosed with HIV/AIDS: 72% were African-American (AA), non-Hispanic; 13% were Hispanic, 13% were white (in contrast to general population of 17% AA, 15% Hispanic, and 62% white) (CDC, 2009).

YOUTH AT RISK Young MSM and transgender youth who use alcohol and illegal drugs are at risk for incarceration. African American/Black MSMs are more likely than other MSMs to be incarcerated, increasing the likelihood of exposure to HIV. (SAMSHA, 2009) An estimated 15% of youth in detention are LGBT youth, who are more likely to be convicted in Juvenile Court for longer times. (Juvenile Justice, Louisiana, 2010)

CRIMINALIZATION OF HIV IN THE U.S. In the U.S., 35 states have prosecuted HIV positive individuals for exposing another person to HIV: A person diagnosed with HIV who infects their partner while engaging in sexual intercourse is committing a crime; A person donating HIV infected organs, tissues, and blood can be prosecuted for transmission of the virus; Spitting or transmitting HIV infected bodily fluids is considered a criminal offense in some states, particularly where the target is a prison guard.

CRIMINALIZATION OF HIV--WORLDWIDE Some countries, particularly in parts of Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, have enacted new HIV-specific laws that criminalize HIV transmission and exposure, Others, primarily in Europe and North America, charge under the existing laws, In many countries, the intentional or reckless infection of a person with HIV is considered to be a crime, This often includes “criminal exposure to HIV,” does not require the transmission of the virus and often, as in the cases of spitting and biting, does not even include a realistic means of transmission (CDC, 2005, 2009), People who do so can be charged with criminal transmission of HIV, murder, manslaughter, attempted murder, or assault, or, in some cases, a misdemeanor.

CRIMINALIZATION OF YOUTH WITH HIV DOESN’T WORK Criminalizing HIV: will not slow down the epidemic, undermines prevention efforts, promotes fear and stigma, is carried out unfairly, should only be applied where someone has infected another with criminal intent, using existing laws, diverts attention from enacting laws that promote prevention and treatment. (Open Society Institute, 2008)

INTERVENING WITH HIV-POSITIVE INCARCERATED YOUTH Criminalization of HIV interferes with prevention efforts and medical intervention: Youth must have access to information and education regarding sexual health; Youth must be protected from sexual violence; Youth must have access to medical diagnosis and treatment.

CONCLUSION Teenagers and young adults in the U.S. are deserving of sexual health care, including: disease prevention, treatment, and an understanding of human sexuality. Sexual health care is essential to reaching and maintaining a healthy adulthood.

REFERENCES CDC, HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report, (2005). CDC, Sexual and reproductive health of persons aged years— United States, (2009). Child Welfare League of America, CWLA best practice guidelines: Serving LGBT youth in out-of-home care, 7,54-55 (2006). Juvenile Justice, Louisiana (2010). Open Society Institute, Ten reasons to oppose the criminalization of HIV exposure or transmission (2008). SAMSHA (2009). The Center for HIV Law and Policy, Teen Sense Initiative, Juvenile Injustice (2010).