City Year DC to Double Size of HIV/AIDS Outreach Team
This morning I got up (early!) for a breakfast at City Year DC. City Year DC unites a diverse group of 17 to 24 year-olds for a year of full-time, team-based community service. One of sixteen City Year sites located across the country, City Year Washington, DC helps children and youth succeed, develops leaders, and improves the community. On of several projects at City Year DC is the HOPE team, a partnership between City Year and Metro Teen AIDS, which works to address and prevent the spread of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the DC community by educating young people about the dangers of HIV/AIDS and how the infection is spread. City Year corps members deliver an 9-week curriculum entitled Making Proud Choices. This CDC-approved curriculum is specifically designed to increase the knowledge of young people about HIV/AIDS, to prevent infection, and to develop positive attitudes about safe sex.
Building on the momentum created by the curriculum, the HOPE Team supports, educates and empowers students to launch after-school clubs focused on promoting healthy choices called “Visionary Youth Becoming Empowered” (VYBE). VYBE clubs are currently active at Eastern High School and Bell Multicultural High School.
I was excited to learn this morning that City Year plans to double the size of the HOPE team in the next year going from 10 to 20 people. This will give them the opportunity to reach even more DC public school students.
Education about HIV and AIDS in DC public schools varies widely depending about what school you are talking about.
I'm glad to see this program growing. I also believe there is a tremendous amount we can learn from the Project Hope Team. I would love to learn more about their experience approaching schools, their thoughts on why some DC schools don't offer comprehensive HIV/AIDS education programs, and their thoughts on standards for DC public schools around HIV/AIDS.
There should be opportunity to have this dialogue at the CDC mandated DC Department of Education HIV/AIDS Program Review Panel. But as we know in DC, even if the CDC mandates it, it doesn't mean the meetings actually take. This group is supposed to meet at least twice a year. I've asked to be notified of meetings, and as far as I know they haven't met in the past eight months (If anybody knows who I can contact at the CDC to let them know their mandated meetings aren't happening, please tell me!).
This to me is just another example of the lack of leadership on HIV/AIDS in the District of Columbia. It's why we need a new Director of the HIV/AIDS Administration as quickly as possible, and why we need a Mayor who is willing to take action on HIV/AIDS.




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