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From the Editor

‘More people are getting tested so the number of PLHIVs is increasing’ is an ineffectual statement

Solely focusing on the message that there are more HIV positive people because more people are now getting tested is inadequate. So to those whose spiel is solely this, your oversimplification is also why the rates are going higher.

If we do not test people for HIV infection, then we won’t know how bad the situation is in the country. So let’s get this out of the way, testing is important.

But solely focusing on this messaging – i.e. that there are more people reported to be HIV positive because more people are now getting tested – is ineffectual, is inadequate, is limiting. I am trying to find “nice” adjectives here, though you get the point, i.e. that the claim is problematic.

Why, oh why?

  1. Just because more people are getting tested for HIV, should not mean that more people will test HIV positive. Ang lazy ng pag-link sa dalawa eh; that marami kasi nagpa-test kaya marami nag-positive, as if one automatically leads to the other.
  2. Yung totoo, kahit marami ang magpapa-test, kung wala namang na-infect ng HIV to begin with, then hindi tataas ang reported HIV infection rates.
  3. Yang pag-taas ng numero, ang pinapakita niyan ay ang failure ng HIV service providers – from the Department of Health to the mayayamang NGOs to the ill-equipped community-based organizations (CBOs) – sa kanilang tungkulin. Yung CBOs puwede i-excuse; yung DOH and ang extremely well-funded NGOs, hindi. Kasi sa tinagal-tagal nilang dapat inatupag ito, ayan na nga… lumalala lang ang numero… kasabay ng pag-yaman ng iilang “service providers”.

So, oo, mahalaga ang figures showing us how bad the situation is in the Philippines. But don’t use the same numbers to “excuse” the failures of the very systems that now exist to deal with HIV.

Bad pa rin ang safer sex education na pinapakalat. Yung DOH, nasa “A, B, C of safer sex” pa rin, pilit na tinutulak ang bulok na “be mutually faithful” message sa panahon ng PrEP, open relationships, polyamory, sex work normalization, et cetera. Marami-raming NGOs, nakatutok sa profit and not sa services. Yung PrEP, available lang sa “can afford”. Yung OHAT Package ng PhilHealth, hindi lubos na pinapakinabangan ng PLHIVs, pero nakakamkam ng ilang “service providers”. Ang ARV, di pa rin ma-access ng mga nasa laylayan ng lipunan.

All these gravely impact the HIV infection rates in this country… hindi lang yung dahil marami ang nagpa-test.

The founder of Outrage Magazine, Michael David dela Cruz Tan completed BA Communication Studies from University of Newcastle in NSW, Australia; and Master of Development Communication from the University of the Philippines-Open University. Conversant in Filipino Sign Language, Mick can: photograph, do artworks with mixed media, write (DUH!), shoot flicks, community organize, facilitate, lecture, and research (with pioneering studies under his belt). He authored "Being LGBT in Asia: Philippines Country Report", and "Red Lives" that creatively retells stories from the local HIV community. Among others, Mick received the Catholic Mass Media Awards in 2006 for Best Investigative Journalism, and Art that Matters - Literature from Amnesty Int'l Philippines in 2020. Cross his path is the dare (guarantee: It won't be boring).

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