Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

17 Nov 2011

Older gays are not as healthy as straights!


recent study released by the University of Washington's School of Social Work is turning attention toward a group of seniors who face unique (and ignored) needs; a group whose numbers are expected to be more than 4 million by 2030--lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) boomers.
Researchers surveyed 2,560 LGBT adults aged 50-95 across the United States, to find that they had greater rates of disability, depression, loneliness and distress compared with heterosexuals of similar ages. Further highlighted by the study were the unique needs of this aging group, such as fear of discrimination, the lack of children to depend on as caregivers and less social support and financial security with age, as older LGBT adults are less likely to be partnered or married than heterosexuals.
Presenting some of the study's key findings during a congressional briefing last week, Karen Fredriksen-Goldsen, the study's lead author, told HealthCanal:
"The health disparities reflect the historical and social context of their lives, and the serious adversity they have encountered can jeopardize their health and willingness to seek services in old age."
Thus, Fredriksen-Goldsen calls for for senior housing, transportation, legal services and social events for LGBT seniors.

16 Nov 2011

Bahamas Bishop Urges Gays To Get Help!


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A senior Bishop at the New Covenant Baptist Church in the Bahamas, Simeon Hall,  is calling for all homosexuals to "seek help" and turn away from "deadly, abnormal sexual practices".

The religious man, who claims not to be homophobic use a local newspapers statistics as the basis for yet another attack on gay people.  Bishop Hall says that in the Bahamas the number of men contracting AIDS because of homosexual practices has doubled in the past few years.


20 Sept 2011

UK Libs urge gay blood ban restriction removal




The Liberal Democrat party has voted to urge the government to go further on removing blood donation restrictions on gay men.
Members at the party’s conference in Birmingham agreed that the new 12-month deferral period is “a ban by any other name” reports UK's Pink News.
Earlier this month, ministers announced that the lifetime ban would be scrapped and gay and bisexual men would be permitted to donate blood if they abstain from sex for 12 months.

20 Aug 2011

Gay 5K race gives a vital health lesson

 

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“IT was high heels and hairspray at the starting line for Scotland’s first Gay 5K” starts the Scottish Herald article on a gay fun run that had a serious message. 

Local heroines Miss Bellahouston and Vanity Von Glow added a flash of glamour to the event, which got off the blocks in Kelvingrove Park in Glasgow last night in a bid to promote sport and better health to the gay community.

13 Aug 2011

US Considers Changes To Gay Blood Donation Ban

 

The U.S. Department of Health is considering a change to the blood donation rules. Gay men are permanently banned from donating in America. Now some scientists and politicians believe the policies should change.

18 Jul 2011

US Blood Donor Denied For Looking to Gay!

 

 

Story ImageAaron Pace is admittedly and noticeably effeminate, but he says he’s not homosexual.   Still, his looks, character and behaviour prompted a blood donation centre to reject him when he tried to donate blood recently and he’s miffed, to say the least, reports the Chicago Sun Times.

9 Jul 2011

Gays In China Devastated By HIV/AIDS

 

According to recent figures released by the Chinese Ministry of Health indicate that one out of three new HIV infections is gay.

The ministry said the research showed that in some south-western cities on the mainland, HIV prevalence among local men having sex with men had almost reached 20 per cent.

5 Jul 2011

India’s health minister calls homosexuality a ‘western disease’

 

There is outrage and condemnation over India’s health minister, Ghulam Nabi Azad, who has been referring to homosexuality as an unnatural “disease” from the west.

29 Jun 2011

UK Gay Celebs Videos - what life could have been like for some UK gay celebs.

 

In a rather unusual, illustrative  and informative way,  The Albert Kennedy Trust have made a series of videos with gay celebrities to highlight what life could have been like for them,  had they been homeless.

 

The charity has picked some of the UK’s top ranking gay stars including Sir Ian McKellen and Paul O’Grady to highlight their campaign AKT Now.

Sir Ian McKellen

Sam Fox

Paul O’Grady

6 Jun 2011

Gay, bisexual teens do riskier things in the USA!

 

A new US government study claims that gay and bisexual high school students are more likely than their heterosexual classmates to smoke, use alcohol or do other risky things.

4 Jun 2011

THT marks 30th anniversary of AIDS discovery with Walk for Life

 

Terrance Higgins Trust (THT) will commemorate the 30th anniversary of the start of the AIDS epidemic with a Walk for Life event in London on Sunday.

3 Jun 2011

AIDS Battle 30 Years On: Tragedy and Hope

 

On June 5, 1981, American epidemiologists reported a baffling event: five young gay men in Los Angeles, all previously healthy, had fallen ill with pneumonia. Two had died. They would be the first casualties of a new virus which has now claimed more lives than a world war.

2 Jun 2011

Ghana AIDS Commission Update

 

The Ghana AIDS Commission (GAC) reported on Wednesday that it envisaged that the risk of the increase of activities of gays had initiated a series of focused surveillance activities for HIV and sexually transmitted infections (STIs).

1 Jun 2011

Australia gay safe sex ads reinstated amid furore

 

Safe sex advocates claimed a victory over Australia's Christian lobby on Wednesday when their HIV campaign posters featuring two men hugging were reinstated at bus stops after an intense online backlash.

27 May 2011

Conversion therapy: 'pray away the gay'

 

Strudwick

Patrick Strudwick visited a conversion therapist saying he wanted to be straight - he is really a journalist and gay rights campaigner. Photograph: Sarah Lee for the Guardian

 

They described her as "reckless", "disrespectful", "dogmatic" and "unprofessional". They said she showed "no empathy" towards her client. Why? Psychotherapist Lesley Pilkington had tried to turn a gay person straight, the UK’s Guardian newspaper says in a special report.

In a landmark ruling this week, Pilkington, 60, was found guilty of "treating" a patient for his homosexuality. A hearing of the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy – the largest professional body for therapists – concluded that the treatment she gave constituted "professional malpractice".

The unanimous verdict came with heavy sanctions. Pilkington's accreditation to the organisation was suspended. She was ordered to complete extensive training and professional development. If she does not file a report in six to 12 months, satisfying the board that she has complied, she will have her membership fully revoked: she will be struck off.

The report concluded: "Mrs Pilkington had allowed her personal preconceived views about gay lifestyle and sexual orientation to affect her professional relationship in a way that was prejudicial."

The client Pilkington tried to cure was me. I am an out, happily gay man. I was undercover, investigating therapists who practise this so-called conversion therapy (also known as reparative therapy) – who try to "pray away the gay". I asked her to make me straight. Her attempts to do so flout the advice of every major mental-health body in Britain.

But despite the decades of abuse that gay patients have received from therapists and psychiatrists – despite the electro-convulsive therapy used until the 1980s, despite the chemical castrations, the aversion therapy (where pain is inflicted to dissuade same-sex fantasies) and despite the recent rise in fundamentalist talking therapy – no one has ever been held to account, tells the Guardian

The details of this case, and another I am pursuing, explain why not only gay clients but mental-health patients in general do not come forward to complain. Psychiatrists and psychotherapists routinely avoid accountability – and the government is helping them do so.

My investigation began in April 2009. I heard that a conference was taking place in London for therapists and psychiatrists who wanted to learn how to convert their patients to heterosexuality. Homosexuality was removed from psychiatry's glossary of mental illnesses in 1973. How then could anyone treat something healthy? I went along to find out, posing as someone looking to be "cured". Two people agreed to treat me. The first was a psychiatrist – we'll come to him later. The second was Lesley Pilkington.

A few weeks later I was in her grand Hertfordshire home with a Dictaphone taped to my stomach. She set about trying to find the childhood "wounds" that she believes led to my homosexuality. But she found none. "There was no sexual abuse?" she pressed.

"No."

"I think there is something there . . . you've allowed things to be done to you." She then prayed: "Father, we give you permission to bring to the surface some of the things that have happened over the years." I asked who could have committed this abuse – a member of my family? "Yes, very likely," she replied.

Was homosexuality a mental illness, an addiction or an anti-religious phenomenon? "It's all of that," said Pilkington. During the sessions, she recited prayers for me to say whenever I thought about a man sexually. She gave me how-to-be-heterosexual tips such as taking up rugby, abstaining from masturbation and distancing myself from gay friends.

When the results of my investigation were published last year in the Independent, it sparked widespread outrage. Not least because Pilkington claimed that she had had referrals to "treat" gay clients from the NHS GP surgery to which she is attached. As a result of the investigation, the British Medical Association passed a motion condemning conversion therapy and calling on the NHS to investigate instances where it may have unwittingly paid for it.

Just before its publication, in January 2010, I made a formal complaint about Pilkington to the BACP. But by last autumn, little had happened. Three dates for a hearing were made and then cancelled. The BACP, which has 32,000 members, explained that they couldn't find people for the adjudication panel. Why? "The legal advice we've been given is that the panel members can't be very religious but nor can they be overtly pro-gay," said Fay Reaney from the professional conduct department. So in a complaint about racism would they therefore not allow someone on the panel who is strongly opposed to racism? "This is the advice we've been given," she replied.

A new date – 20 January – was confirmed. Four days before the hearing Pilkington gave an interview to the Sunday Telegraph, contrary to BACP guidelines that neither party speak publicly about the case. I had not named her in my original article. She then went on the radio to talk about it. In response to Pilkington's disclosures – 48 hours before the hearing was due to take place – the BACP adjourned it and issued us both with confidentiality agreements.

The signed agreements would have prevented either side from ever talking about the case. My barrister, Sarah Bourke, advised me not to sign. But I couldn't decide. I didn't want to jeopardise the case but was it worth pursuing if it could never be discussed publicly? The BACP wouldn't tell me what would happen if I refused to sign.

Meanwhile, Pilkington's representatives – the Christian Legal Centre – were making intriguing claims. On the day the hearing would have taken place, they stated that it had been postponed because one of the expert witnesses she had cited in her defence had been subject to "menacing phone calls, threats and intimidation". I was the only person named in her lawyers' statement. Although she submitted testimony from several witnesses, I never knew their names and the BACP did not call any of them.

But the Daily Mail ran a story regardless: "Trial of therapist who tried to 'cure' gay man is halted after 'expert defence witness is intimidated'," screamed the headline. Countless Christian websites repeated the claims. Hate mail poured in. Pilkington continued to give interviews and gave a talk at another conversion-therapy conference in London. With the agreements unsigned, the BACP decided to go ahead regardless. What was the point of adjourning the case for four months? The BACP would not explain.

Finally, the date was set. During the hearing, Pilkington said she still "feels there's a need" for my homosexuality to be treated. The panel asked her if it was good practice to say to someone who had stated they had not been sexually abused: "You've let things be done to you." She replied: "It didn't come across like that."

Was it, the panel asked, her belief that homosexuality was wrong, sinful or unnatural? "Oh yes," she replied. "There's no question about that . . . but there's a way out."

Pilkington revealed that she was trying to convert another gay client to heterosexuality. But that now she's "clearer" about it – she uses a contract adapted from a US-based conversion-therapy organisation. Equally startling, however, was what the panel asked me: on what basis did I assert that the BACP was publicly opposed to conversion therapy? I read aloud the letter the BACP had written to the Guardian in 2009 describing such therapy as "absurd" and stating that it "makes people with gay thoughts suffer extra pain". The panel was unaware of the letter and the BACP's position on the subject. After lunch the chair announced that they would disregard the statement as they "don't know who authorised it".

As the hearing progressed, I discovered the strain all complainants go through. I was cross-examined at length by Pilkington's barrister and by the panel. How would someone with mental-health problems cope with that? And it isn't just the emotional challenges that could deter a complainant. Without being well educated and having free legal help to interpret the BACP's jargon-dense literature and legal letters, I would have found the process incomprehensible and intimidating.

The BACP's ruling in the Pilkington case will, however, help to reassure the victims of conversion therapy. Since my first article was published dozens of people have contacted me describing their experiences. Young people whose parents had forced them into residential gay "cure" centres in the US deep south. Middle-aged men and women who wasted decades trying to be straight. Several people who had attempted suicide. One young man showed me the self-harm scars on his arms. I thought about him every day.

But although this case will serve as a precedent, it does not solve the wider problem. Even if Pilkington had been struck off completely she would still be able to carry on practising. Anyone can claim to be a therapist in Britain because there is no state regulation of the profession. "Psychotherapist" and "counsellor" are not protected titles. The BACP is a self-regulating, independent body. No one has to be a member. Thus you can't stop a bad therapist seeing clients any more than you can a fortune-teller.

The previous government had planned to regulate counsellors and psychotherapists by bringing them under the Health Professions Council, in line with other health workers, such as chiropodists, hearing aid dispensers and art therapists. This would have provided a central body offering standardised codes of conduct. But, contrary to the advice of mental-health charities such as Mind, the coalition has decided not to do this. Instead, the HPC will introduce a voluntary register for therapists.

But there is another unsettling thread to this story: that of the psychiatrist. His name is Dr Paul Miller. After meeting him at the London conference, he agreed to "treat" me for my homosexuality via Skype – as he lives in Belfast. He claims to have "resolved" his own conflicted sexuality and is now married with children.

Miller told me that homosexuality "represents a pathology". He added: "The men you were having sex with or falling in love with are just as wounded as you." He concluded that because my father is a physicist, and I was always more creative, that prevented a "gender-affirming process" which in turn led to my sexualising men.

His advice was for me to have massages with male masseurs and to stand in front of the mirror naked, touching myself, thus somehow affirming my masculinity/heterosexuality. He told me to visualise a red light when aroused: "I want you to move that red from your genitals up into your chest," he said.

I complained to the General Medical Council (the Royal College of Psychiatrists has no remit for disciplinary procedures). The RCPsych has stated: "There is no sound scientific evidence that sexual orientation can be changed." Yet the GMC let Miller off without even a warning – in fact, without even a hearing.

After receiving my complaint they appointed a consultant psychiatrist – whose identity was redacted – to write a report about the taped evidence I submitted. The crux of the report was that conventional therapeutic practices used by many psychotherapists have "as much or little scientific evidence" as conversion/reparative therapy. And yet reparative therapy is based on the work of self-proclaimed psychologist Elizabeth Moberly, who is not trained – her degree was in theology – and whose theories were not based on clinical research. The professional guideline document Good Psychiatric Practice, to which all psychiatrists are bound, states: "A psychiatrist must provide care that does not discriminate and is sensitive to issues of sexual orientation." The GMC report relating to my experience concludes: "I do not consider that Dr Miller's actions were inconsistent with Good Psychiatric Practice." I will appeal.

Read the full article here

Conversion therapy: she tried to make me 'pray away the gay' | World news | The Guardian

17 May 2011

Elton John Has Meeting With David Cameron

 

Pop music legend Sir Elton John has held Downing Street talks with Prime Minister David Cameron about the work of his Aids foundation.  The meeting held earlier this week was to reaffirm the work of Elton’s AIDS foundation,  which has raised more than £130 million since 1992.  The foundation campaigns against stigma and discrimination surrounding the illness as well as helping to supply services for people with the illness.  Many such services in the public sector are facing huge cuts under this governments cost cutting programmes.

9 May 2011

Being Gay Increases Cancer Rate ?

 

 

Gay men 'report higher cancer rate than straight men'

Two men

According to a new study there is a new health worry for gay men -  cancer.

8 May 2011

Gay Indian Prince To Work In Jail

 

Gay prince to help with AIDS awareness in Jail

 

Manvendrasinh Gohil runs Lakshya Trust that works among gay men

Prince Manvendrasinh Gohil, who had created ripples when he had openly admitted his homosexuality, has been invited by jail authorities to create awareness on HIV and AIDS at Sabarmati Central Jail and all other jails in the state.

Gohil rose to fame in the UK after appearing on an TV show that features three princes from different cultures coming to seaside town of Brighton in search of love.

The search of acceptance and understanding in his own country has been far from easy,  it is a battle, the local authority claims that there is no gay behaviour at the central jail.

 

18 Apr 2011

AIDS prevention pill study halted

 

AIDS prevention pill study halted; no benefit seen

 

Researchers are stopping a study that tests a daily pill to prevent infection with the AIDS virus in thousands of African women because partial results show no signs that the drug is doing any good, reports news network AP.

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12 Apr 2011

US HIV patients want right to HIV organ transplants

 

HIV-positive patients in the US are lobbying for the right to receive HIV-infected transplant organs.   They argue that there are hundreds of HIV-infected organs available every year and that making the change would save lives and give more people the chance of a transplant.