If the use PrEP can significantly lower the incidence of HIV, whether in combination with condoms or without, then it is well worth my tax dollars to support the effort. Their is a shift occurring in the way we approach preventive health measures. Insurance companies and governments are realizing that prevention and education can greatly reduce long term costs and improve overall health. For example, my insurance company now provides membership to a gym as part of my coverage. They figure the more I exercise the better and the availability of the gym can encourage that. It is the same reason we vaccinate. Yes, it is the responsibility of the individual, but with encouragement more individuals may become responsible.
For you guys who have mentioned that sex ed is not as thorough as it might be, it is important to realize just how much things have changed. When I was in grade school sex ed was NEVER approached. We got a little lecture in junior high school about not doing things we shouldn't, but no specifics and much nervousness on the part of both students and teachers. The words penis, vagina, and condom were never spoken in public. Syphilis, gonorrhea and other STD's were not discussed and no one that I knew in school would have dared to ask their parents about these things--not that the parents would have necessarily been well informed. Absolutely NONE of this would have been mentioned, let alone discussed, on television. We are headed in the right direction but we need to keep up the effort.
We certainly need to give our kids more information and we need to shed the puritanism that has prevented us doing so. The responsibility for education definitely lies with the individual but it ALSO lies with the people and institutions which shape and support that individual. It is why free and open libraries, educational programs and government and private health insurers should work toward us all knowing what we need to know.
For you guys who have mentioned that sex ed is not as thorough as it might be, it is important to realize just how much things have changed. When I was in grade school sex ed was NEVER approached. We got a little lecture in junior high school about not doing things we shouldn't, but no specifics and much nervousness on the part of both students and teachers. The words penis, vagina, and condom were never spoken in public. Syphilis, gonorrhea and other STD's were not discussed and no one that I knew in school would have dared to ask their parents about these things--not that the parents would have necessarily been well informed. Absolutely NONE of this would have been mentioned, let alone discussed, on television. We are headed in the right direction but we need to keep up the effort.
We certainly need to give our kids more information and we need to shed the puritanism that has prevented us doing so. The responsibility for education definitely lies with the individual but it ALSO lies with the people and institutions which shape and support that individual. It is why free and open libraries, educational programs and government and private health insurers should work toward us all knowing what we need to know.
I bid NO Trump!