Post by blackcrowheart on Mar 24, 2006 9:55:03 GMT -5
Conference on HIV prevention among native youth
Conference on HIV prevention among native youth Native American young
people will gather April 6-8 in Oklahoma City for what is believed to be
the first national conference for native youth on AIDS and HIV awareness
and prevention. Wednesday, March 22, 2006
by Linda Green
www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?idcategory=33&idSub=134&idArt\
icle=2968
<http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?idcategory=33&idSub=134&idAr\
ticle=2968>
Native American young people will gather April 6-8 in Oklahoma City for
what is believed to be the first national conference for native youth on
AIDS and HIV awareness and prevention.
Called "Native P.R.O.U.D.," the conference will focus on prevention,
responsibility, ownership, understanding and determination as keys to
helping native young people make wise decisions regarding risky
behavior. The event is sponsored by the United Methodist Native American
International Caucus and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"There has never been a conference for Native American youth on AIDS and
HIV awareness," said the Rev. Alvin Deer, executive director of the
native caucus.
The intended audience is not just native youth who attend church but
those on reservations and in rural communities where AIDS and HIV
infections are high as well. Native youth, he said, have the
second-highest incidence of sexually transmitted diseases in America.
Factors influencing risky behavior include alcohol and drug use and
abuse, which result in unwanted pregnancies and other ills.
The three-day conference is also for church leaders, tribal youth
program staff, health professionals working in native communities,
tribal leaders and church leaders.
"If one youth becomes HIV infected, it puts the whole community at
risk," Deer said. "We feel that this potential community endangerment is
more dangerous to our communities than, say, us worrying whether the
bird flu will come to America."
With high rates of broken homes on Indian reservations and in Indian
rural communities, there are few positive voices out there saying "you
can make a healthy choice for your life," Deer said.
"I also firmly believe that this voice must be coming from our
churches," he said. "We can't just be 'preaching stations' urging young
people to make a decision for Christ without also preaching a message of
'abundant living.'"
The conference is funded through a 2003 faith-based grant the caucus
received from the Institute for Youth Development in Washington, to
support "at-risk" youth through a nationwide youth network. The total
grant was $30,800. The NAIC was the first Native American denominational
ministry to receive funding from President Bush's faith-based and
community initiative program.
The caucus also received financial support from the Centers for Disease
Control to develop and implement a program of HIV/AIDS awareness among
native communities. "Teen Empowerment" is an abstinence-based prevention
program that provides youth learning opportunities to make healthy
choices.
The program will be introduced at the three-day conference. Youth, the
significant adults in their lives and health professionals serving in
their communities will take advantage of separate educational tracks to
become more aware of the dangers and meet the challenges. Participants
will explore relationships, sexuality, risky behaviors, abstinence and
making decisions that impact their futures.
"Being 'Native P.R.O.U.D.' means you take pride in who you are as a
person," Deer said. "God made native people as a distinct and unique
people in the whole world. We have a heritage that is something to be
proud of, not only culturally but historically. We have a lot to be
proud of as a contemporary person."
Those providing leadership will include Lisa Tiger, a Muscogee Native
woman who contracted AIDS in the 1980s. She is an AIDS activist and will
speak about her personal experiences and how the disease has affected
her life.
UMNS. Green is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in
Nashville, Ten
Conference on HIV prevention among native youth Native American young
people will gather April 6-8 in Oklahoma City for what is believed to be
the first national conference for native youth on AIDS and HIV awareness
and prevention. Wednesday, March 22, 2006
by Linda Green
www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?idcategory=33&idSub=134&idArt\
icle=2968
<http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?idcategory=33&idSub=134&idAr\
ticle=2968>
Native American young people will gather April 6-8 in Oklahoma City for
what is believed to be the first national conference for native youth on
AIDS and HIV awareness and prevention.
Called "Native P.R.O.U.D.," the conference will focus on prevention,
responsibility, ownership, understanding and determination as keys to
helping native young people make wise decisions regarding risky
behavior. The event is sponsored by the United Methodist Native American
International Caucus and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
"There has never been a conference for Native American youth on AIDS and
HIV awareness," said the Rev. Alvin Deer, executive director of the
native caucus.
The intended audience is not just native youth who attend church but
those on reservations and in rural communities where AIDS and HIV
infections are high as well. Native youth, he said, have the
second-highest incidence of sexually transmitted diseases in America.
Factors influencing risky behavior include alcohol and drug use and
abuse, which result in unwanted pregnancies and other ills.
The three-day conference is also for church leaders, tribal youth
program staff, health professionals working in native communities,
tribal leaders and church leaders.
"If one youth becomes HIV infected, it puts the whole community at
risk," Deer said. "We feel that this potential community endangerment is
more dangerous to our communities than, say, us worrying whether the
bird flu will come to America."
With high rates of broken homes on Indian reservations and in Indian
rural communities, there are few positive voices out there saying "you
can make a healthy choice for your life," Deer said.
"I also firmly believe that this voice must be coming from our
churches," he said. "We can't just be 'preaching stations' urging young
people to make a decision for Christ without also preaching a message of
'abundant living.'"
The conference is funded through a 2003 faith-based grant the caucus
received from the Institute for Youth Development in Washington, to
support "at-risk" youth through a nationwide youth network. The total
grant was $30,800. The NAIC was the first Native American denominational
ministry to receive funding from President Bush's faith-based and
community initiative program.
The caucus also received financial support from the Centers for Disease
Control to develop and implement a program of HIV/AIDS awareness among
native communities. "Teen Empowerment" is an abstinence-based prevention
program that provides youth learning opportunities to make healthy
choices.
The program will be introduced at the three-day conference. Youth, the
significant adults in their lives and health professionals serving in
their communities will take advantage of separate educational tracks to
become more aware of the dangers and meet the challenges. Participants
will explore relationships, sexuality, risky behaviors, abstinence and
making decisions that impact their futures.
"Being 'Native P.R.O.U.D.' means you take pride in who you are as a
person," Deer said. "God made native people as a distinct and unique
people in the whole world. We have a heritage that is something to be
proud of, not only culturally but historically. We have a lot to be
proud of as a contemporary person."
Those providing leadership will include Lisa Tiger, a Muscogee Native
woman who contracted AIDS in the 1980s. She is an AIDS activist and will
speak about her personal experiences and how the disease has affected
her life.
UMNS. Green is a United Methodist News Service news writer based in
Nashville, Ten