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Month: December 2000

If at first you don’t succeed… A Turkish couple was so determined to have sons that after the first ten girls were born, they kept trying… and trying… and trying… They ended up with 25 kids, only four of whom were boys.

Today is world AIDS day To commemorate this event, Metafilter is posting almost exclusively AIDS/HIV-related links. Go there and learn something.

Here are some of the headlines from MeFi:

Four out of 10 people mistakenly believe it is possible to get HIV by sharing a drinking glass or being coughed or sneezed on by an infected person. The survey, released Thursday, was conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “It’s scary that so many people are still so ignorant of what causes HIV-AIDS,” said Marty Algaze, a spokesman for the Gay Men’s Health Crisis. “Almost 20 years into this epidemic, it’s disturbing that people think you could still get it from casual contact.”

Needle exchanges reduce the number of new HIV infections, rid the streets of dirty needles, while not increasing drug use among those participating in exchanges. Too bad the US gov’t refuses to fund them.

Everyday life for a teenager with AIDS: Stephanie Lee Ray, a 12-year-old with AIDS, is proving the doctors wrong. She was not supposed to live past age 5, so she lives for every moment. She wants to play and grow and go to school. She has felt the effects of people’s ignorance about the disease. She has suffered disapproving stares and comments.Rather than feel sorry for herself, she prefers to educate people to make wise choices. She knows that her life really counts. (The story is almost 2 years old, and the wonderful pix aren’t archived with it, but it’s worth reading anyway, especially for the feel of a life when any cold or simple fever can become a life-threatening crisis.)

More AIDS/HIV related info