The Michigan Daily - Friday, December 6, 1991 - Page 5 X: * rblems by Henry Goldblatt for Uni Daily Administration Reporter time c Most students think they can't meet w 1get AIDS'because they are young and testing have a tough immune system. and tre Or because they are not gay, or tests pC aren't IV drug users. receive Or because they have been in one said. relationship "for a long time." Paul But people with AIDS or the shouldv HIV virus disagree. risky se "I lost my virginity and got the for HIV disease in one night - it was a ban- encouni Ser night," said Pat, a local resident cent ac who contracted the virus in 1982. recom "If ... education had been avail- months. able in 1982, I might have used a percent condom," he added. AIth Pat is one of more than 100 peo- ment c ple who have tested HIV-positive in testing, Washtenaw county - 20 of whom tinuesi were tested at University Health priority Services (UHS) since the center be- Paul g9h testing in 1987. peer ed * A joint study done by the Amer- trained ican College Health Association halls an and the Center for Disease Control student found that 2.3 out of every 1,000 "Th college students tested positive for get the the HIV antibody, which usually problem leads to the full-blown AIDS virus. you can A college student might look at The this figure and think he or she is not grams ti at risk because it appears small. "We "I was a virgin. It only takes academ once," Pat said. could re Prevention through ple -p education in the r UHS Director Dr. Caesar Briefer Indi said professional basketball star availabi Magic Johnson's recent announce- Gay N ment that he tested HIV-positive (LGMP sparked a massive rush of people to LG Health Services who wanted to be said HI' tested. ject to During the week of November heteros W11-15, Health Services tested 81 cause t people and turned 45 away due to an mentc overflow of requests. In compari- orientat son, Health Services tested approx- "If a imately 30 people per week between HIV-po June 1990 and June 1991 - a total worse," of 1,437 people. Briefer added the Toy numbers have fallen off since John- Wellne son's initial announcement. suppor "As soon as you have anything refers p Othat tends to increase public aware- counsel ness of a problem you get an increase Des in interest and concern," he said. curring Polly Paulson, health education awaren coordinator for UHS, said that "Th Health Services provides free and ing to m anonymous HIV antibody testing ing safe r .;r:s prevention m::: versity students. Seven part- ounselors are employed to ith clients before and after to discuss safe sex practices atment options if a client ositive. A person generally s results in three weeks, she son stressed that people wait several months after a exual encounter to be tested . Three months after such an ter, the test is 80 to 85 per- :curate. However, Paulson mends people wait six when the test is 95 to 99 accurate. ough Johnson's announce- aused an increase in AIDS Paulson said education con- to be the center's first ." son coordinates a safe-sex ucation program, in which volunteers go to residence nd Greek houses to educate s about AIDS transmission. e programs are an effort to word out that ... there is a n ... and there is something do about it," Paulson said. group has facilitated 29 pro- his semester, she said. are trying to get into the ic classroom. We think we each a greater number of peo- people not necessarily living esidence hall," Paulson said. vidual counseling is also le through the Lesbian and Male Programs Office O). OPO co-coordinator Jim Toy V-positive gay men are sub- more discrimination than exuals who test positive be- hey face additional harass- on the basis of sexual ion. person is suspected of being sitive the discrimination is Toy said. also serves on the board for ss Huron Valley, an AIDS t center in Ypsilanti, and people who desire additional ing to that organization. pite the education that is oc- many experts said the ess level is low. e thing that is most frustrat- me is that people are not hav- sex and there is so much ig- norance about it," said Joe, a local resident who tested HIV-positive. Deborah Orlowski, a representa- tive of the University's Affirma- tive Action Office, said that general knowledge about the disease is often incomplete. "I am a little disturbed by the Magic Johnson thing. People are saying that we need to use condoms. However, condoms are not fail-safe ... and you need to use condoms and a spermicide like Nonoxinal 9," she added. LSA senior and peer educator Seth Persky said that he finds vari- ous levels of knowledge in students. "People know the basics. It was t the6 U' "1 group with HIV," she said. "I feel safer sex education is relevant be- cause people who are HIV-positive need information to know how to protect other people." David Ostrowe, associate profes- sor of psychiatry and Director of the Midwest AIDS Biobehavioral Re- search Center, said the University is lagging behind other universities in AIDS-preventative education. "The University is the largest public university that does not have an active AIDS program funded by the university regents," he said. He added that a new task force should be created to develop AIDS programming on campus. Maurer said, and when employees ask about it, they are told it is not available. Nor is the staff knowledgeable about basic HIV transmission pre- vention, she said. However, Candace Friedman, the hospital's manager of infection con- trol services, said all employees watch an AIDS information video and new employees are also given pamphlets. In addition, she said, "Certain employees who may have a risk of handling blood or bodily fluid ... receive routine training." Friedman said additional HIV training is decided on a departmen- tal level. Employees most at risk receive the most training, she explained. But Ostrowe maintained that Universitv Hosnital emnnvees are AIDS awareness disappears like Magic It came and went as fast as the roadrunner, didn't it? You remember - the Much Ado .+i5 About Magic. Not even a month after ' the frenzied media hype over basket- ball star Magic Johnson's bold decision to disclose his HIV positive status to the world, it looks like it's over. Not 30 Stephen Hrdeso with the Magic Johnson thing the questions really changed. It used to be, 'How can you get this and if you get it what can you do,"' Persky said. "Now, it's more like 'this can happen to me.' The focus is more on themselves and ... the realization heterosexuals do get it and can die from it." But the epidemic has spurred be- havioral changes as well as discus- sion. "For the first time in my life, I had second thoughts about pursuing a girl that I met in a bar, not know- ing her past history," said LSA. sophomore Rob Light. University policy debates Five years ago, the University AIDS Task Force was charged with finding a policy for the treatment of HIV-positive employees and stu- dents. The task force, now defunct, adopted a policy framed by the American College Health Associa- tion. Although Paulson was unhappy that the original task force did not include a person with AIDS among its members, she said it could still be useful "to monitor how the spirit of this policy is being implemented." The policy bans discrimination in admissions decisions and educa- tional settings. Furthermore, it prohibits mandatory testing of stu- dents, staff and faculty. Despite the policy, many criti- cize the University for not taking a pro-active role in AIDS education and for not publicizing the policy widely enough. Pattrice Maurer, a member of the AIDS Coalition To Unleash Power (ACT-UP), said the group has pre- sented a number of demands to the University, including widespread safe sex education. "This is particularly critical be- cause youth are the fastest growing Toy, from LGMPO, said the University should reach out to the community to increase awareness. "The University in my opinion needs to do a general mailing every fall about AIDS and about the stigmatization of the matter and telling people to behave in an ethi- cal way toward these people." But Orlowski said these ideas, while important, are impractical in a large, decentralized University setting. "Even if the president stood up and said 'I want to make HIV educa- tion a number-one priority' this does not mean that it is going to happen because the University is so decentralized," Orlowski said. "It is very difficult to educate people at the University, perhaps because we haven't found the right vehicle. Even when things are avail- able people are not taking advan- tage," she added. Orlowski said the University should take a more pro-active role in residence hall education and increase funding for costly programming. Hospital training practices University staff and ACT-UP members criticize the University Hospital for the lack of education it provides to its staff and for what they call an unwelcome climate to- ward people with AIDS and the HIV virus. Toy said he has heard complaints from people with AIDS who have received treatment from the Uni- versity Hospital regarding the atti- tudes of staff members and their lack of knowledge. "I have known people with AIDS and HIV who were hospital employees, all of whom chose to seek treatment elsewhere because treatment at the hospital was so bad," Maurer said. Adequate education is not being provided to all hospital employees, KENNETH SMOLLER/Daily not properly trained. "People who are working with patients don't have enough education," he said. Laura Kaufman, a nurse practi- tioner in the hospital's Employee Health Services, which provides anonymous HIV testing for Uni- versity employees, said not all the nurses who perform HIV tests are HIV-certified, but added that a nurse does not have to be certified to test. She said, however, that the nurses are better educated than people who are not involved in HIV testing. "We don't know that everyone is well educated. The people who do direct patient care are more educated than people who don't." But Toy said this action is not enough. He suggested a mass train- ing of all hospital employees on is- sues surrounding AIDS and the HIV virus. "Every new hire of the medical center needs to go through routine training about AIDS," he said. Living with AIDS While the debate over Univer- sity policies and University Hospi- tal practices continue, people are more concerned than ever with the virus' immediate effect on their lives. "You have to be really careful with everything you do. I even feel nervous using public facilities," said LSA sophomore Christine Warner. "It's sad that we have to live in this type of world." However, some live with fear on a constant basis. "I found out I was HIV-positive five years ago Febru- ary," Joe said at the World AIDS Day Panel discussion Tuesday. "That was devastating news - it still is devastating news on a day- to-day and moment-to-moment basis." - Daily Staff Reporter Lauren Dermer contributed to this story days after the press conferences, after the editorial columns that read more like eulogies than anything else, or - most impor- tantly - after we pricked our collective consciousness to the reality and danger of AIDS, America has fallen back into the status quo. Nowhere was this more evident to me than right here on campus. In the first few days after Magic made his stunning an- nouncement, and pledged a nationwide AIDS education campaign, the University's hallowed halls were buzzing with talk about AIDS. In classes and cafeterias, and in libraries and lounges, whether students thought Magic was morally right or wrong in his predicament, they were reminding themselves that AIDS isn't just a disease that other people get, something only homosexuals and IV drug-users have to worry about. It's everybody's problem. That renewed awareness reflected pretty brightly over at University Health Services, too. Requests for AIDS tests in the week immediately after Magic's announcement were "substantially higher" than during other weeks, according to UHS officials. And store clerks at the Village Apothecary on South University reported increased condom sales. But now, the pro-awareness kick is fizzling. I don't hear so much talk about AIDS around campus anymore - not in the libraries, not in the cafeterias, not even here at the Daily. This past Tuesday was World AIDS Day, and most students opted to study for upcoming final exams instead of attending any of the campus events. At Health Services, the mad rush for AIDS tests has also calmed. Dr. Cy Briefer, Director at UHS, said the big interest seems to have passed. Briefer added that what disturbs him even more about students' apparent flash-in-the- pan reaction to Magic is the lack of change in everyday behavior that he sees. "In all the data we have, it looks like most students generally have a high knowledge of AIDS and how it's transmitted," he said. "The big problem, though, is getting them to translate that knowledge into behavior." Briefer said students' social habits sometimes conflict with good sense in terms of AIDS awareness. We aren't very likely to be involved in long-term, monogamous relationships; we have an admittedly foolish sense of invincibility; and when alcohol or other drugs are involved, we often throw caution to the wind and indulge ourselves unwisely and unsafely. And you can see it in any social circle on campus. House parties, the greek system, bars, you name it. It's not so much that we don't know, but that we act like we don't know. Marc Zimmerman, an assistant professor of health behavior and education, agreed. "Many college students still think they won't get it - they think we're past the real scare," he said. "That's potentially very dangerous behavior." And a change in that behavior isn't very hard. It doesn't mean we have to nractice abstinence. And it Top: Panels of the Names Project AIDS Memorial Quilt are on display at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Above left: Blood samples are being placed in a centrifuge at Health Services I nhnratnrv Tha hlnn e