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STD
information for students
References/ suggested
reading material
Chlamydia
Gonorrhoea
Syphilis
Information for
Aboriginal health workers
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Aboriginal people and Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Information for students
When Aboriginal people are asked what makes safe sex
education difficult in their community, the answer is usually
"shame". The discussion of sexual issues is a very sensitive
matter and is generally considered inappropriate. In particular, it is
totally inappropriate for such discussion to take place between women and
men. In addition, male homosexuality and lesbianism are not culturally
acceptable, although they exist in Aboriginal communities.
Safe sex messages promoted within the non-Aboriginal
community are often inappropriate for the Aboriginal community. For
example, polygamy is sometimes practised in Aboriginal communities, and
consequently safe sex messages emphasising the importance of limiting the
number of sexual partners are often unacceptable. Language may also be
inappropriate. English is not necessarily the first language of some
Aboriginal people, and even where it is, terms used to describe sexual
behaviours may be completely different. In addition, people may not be
able to read, so that written material is inappropriate (although this can
relate to many non-Aboriginal people too).
Another factor that influences many Aboriginal people,
in terms of seeking help for existing health problems, is an acceptance of
illness as a normal part of life. This is related to the fact that ill
health is very prevalent among many urban, fringe, and rural Aboriginal
people. Some STDs, particularly gonorrhoea
and syphilis, are much more
prevalent among Aboriginal people than non-Aboriginal.
There are also many barriers that may prevent Aboriginal
people from consulting doctors or nurses. Health professionals are often
non-Aboriginal, and people fear discrimination and unfamiliar procedures.
Safe Sex
Western methods of contraception are foreign to
traditional Aboriginal communities. Methods such as oral contraception may
often be inappropriate because they are expensive, and the idea of taking
a pill every day at the same time may be alien to people who do not
necessarily live their lives by the clock. IUDs may be considered more
reliable in these terms, but carry a risk of upper genital tract
infection (i.e. pelvic inflammatory disease),
especially given the prevalence of some STDs. In addition, there is often
a deep-seated anxiety within Aboriginal communities about contraception.
Having babies is often very important, and contraception can tap into
fears about "wiping out the race". Advocating the use of condoms
(also a foreign concept) for protection against STDs, can intensify this
fear.
Feedback from Aboriginal health workers and community
members involved in the Northern Territory AIDS: A Story In Our Hands To
Share Project (Department of Aboriginal Affairs, 1989), indicates that
with appropriate information and support, provided by Aboriginal people
themselves, condoms are becoming more accepted. Aboriginal people are
finding culturally appropriate ways, such as this story-telling project,
to spread safe sex messages in their communities. Based on the experience
of Aboriginal health workers, it is also particularly important within
Aboriginal groups that women work with women, and men with men. |