http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=90668&d=6&m=1&y=2007&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom


            Saturday, 6, January, 2007 (17, Dhul Hijjah, 1427)


                  Survey Provides Insight Into AIDS Awareness Among Youth
                  Maha Akeel, Arab News 


                    
                  JEDDAH, 6 January 2007 - A pilot study released in December 
reveals interesting views and habits by a sample of Saudi young men on a taboo 
topic that is somewhat counter to the perceived reality. 

                  In conservative Saudi society, speaking about sex publicly is 
uncomfortable let alone speaking about sexually transmitted infections, 
especially the ones caused by the HIV virus that leads to AIDS. 

                  An economics professor at King Abdul Aziz University 
conducted a survey of male university students aged between 19 and 23 on their 
knowledge and attitude toward AIDS and their evaluation of its social and 
economic effects. Although the sample is small, 147, their honest answers might 
indicate more sexual activity among youths than society recognizes and which 
require honest attention.

                  "The Jeddah male student community, with colleagues and 
acquaintances, is a sexually active group," said Omar Al-Murshedi regarding the 
results of his study that he plans to expand including a larger number of 
subjects. "We should not neglect this group despite its high awareness of the 
issue (of AIDS) whether in terms of education, prevention, treatment and care, 
financially and psychologically."

                  The majority of the students (61 percent) said they believe 
the social perception of the disease negatively affects feeling of sympathy for 
AIDS patients. The same number attributed this negative perception to the view 
that AIDS is God's wrath for immoral behavior. Views that AIDS patients are 
perverts, gays or cheating spouses were the reason cited by 39 percent of those 
surveyed for the stigma associated with AIDS.

                  Almost all of the surveyed (90 percent) believe that the 
number of those afflicted with AIDS in Saudi Arabia is much higher than the 
officially announced numbers, perhaps hinting at their awareness of prevalence 
of sexually risky behaviors in their community. 

                  Health Ministry officials say there are 10,120 reported 
HIV/AIDS cases in Saudi Arabia, of which 7,804 are non-Saudi. 

                  Thirty-four percent of the survey respondents said they 
believed that Saudi officials deliberately reduce this number, while 32 percent 
said they think the number is simply inaccurate. A third of the respondents 
said they think the number is accurate for reported cases, but that they 
believed that considering unreported cases the number is much higher. 

                  Based on studies in Africa, the World Health Organization 
estimates that for every reported case of AIDS, nine cases go unreported in 
countries where the statistical information is incomplete or questionable, or 
when health care workers aren't trained or encouraged to keep records of 
confirmed or suspected HIV cases in their clinics. If this theory were applied 
to Saudi Arabia, the number of HIV cases could be over 100,000.

                  Exacerbating the problem in the Kingdom is the high number of 
undocumented migrants and visa overstayers from countries with high incidences 
of AIDS. Simply put the health of many of the Kingdom's illegal migrants is 
unchecked. (Legal residents must be cleared of HIV to obtain a work/residency 
permit.)

                  Asked which group is more at risk of acquiring or might 
already be carrying the HIV virus, 39 percent said single men with regular 
sexual relations, 31 percent said married men having affairs, 18 percent said 
drug addicts and only 12 percent said homosexuals. It is worth noting that 22 
percent of those surveyed are married. 

                  A bolder question asked how many do they estimate of their 
friends and acquaintances have practiced or are practicing pre-marital sex. 
Forty-nine percent of the respondents estimated that at least half of their 
respective social circles were engaged in sex before marriage. Thirty-four 
percent estimated that a fourth of their friends and acquaintances were engaged 
in pre-marital sex. 

                  These answers actually correlate with official findings that 
80 percent of the reported HIV virus cases were transmitted through sexual 
intercourse. The same estimates state that for each HIV positive woman in the 
Kingdom there are three men with the virus. Worldwide the ratio of men to women 
is 1:1. In Saudi Arabia, men are three times more likely to have the HIV virus 
than women, mostly due to the fact that foreigners are more likely to have HIV 
and to be men. Eighty percent of reported AIDS cases in the Kingdom are people 
between the ages of 15 and 49. 

                  Almost half of those surveyed (48 percent) said that it is 
easier to acquire the services of a prostitute abroad while 35 percent admitted 
that it is possible to pay for sex inside the Kingdom as well. Sixty-one 
percent of the respondents say they spend their vacations abroad. 

                  On the other hand, 58 percent of those surveyed said they 
believed the growth in Saudi AIDS cases was due to sexual contact with illegal 
expatriates in the Kingdom.

                  In answers to questions on awareness, education and 
prevention campaigns, the young men surveyed showed a high level of honesty and 
understanding of the seriousness of the problem. Eighy-eight percent of them 
find that intensifying religious awareness could limit the spread of the virus. 

                  A majority of the respondents (72 percent) approve of 
introducing the topic of sexually transmitted infections and diseases in high 
school and at the university level. Three fourths of those surveyed said they 
would support awareness campaigns on safe sex. Eighty-two percent said they 
would support measures to encourage engaged couples to have pre-nuptial HIV 
tests. 

                  The young men also showed a high sense of awareness of the 
possible effect on society if measures are not taken to curtail the spread of 
the virus. They predicted an increase in the number of cases thus an increase 
in the number of spinsterhood, homosexuality, marriage to non-Saudis, widows 
and orphans. 

                  All these results they said would have an impact on the 
social structure and on government plans and government spending. They made 
some recommendations for officials and society. 

                  They asked religious leaders to encourage moral behavior, 
parents to ease early marriage and society to treat AIDS' patients with care. 
They called for awareness campaigns in schools, free voluntary AIDS tests, 
repatriation-fee on sponsors if the employee is diagnosed with HIV and 
implementing a fingerprint system for preventing those already listed as 
diagnosed from entry. They also asked for making the treatment available for 
free to those financially incapable.
                 
           
     


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