HIV/AIDS activist brings practical message to Nassau

 

By Amelia A. Hart
Nassau Neighbors staff writer

HIV and AIDS were the topics Monday night in Callahan, but fighting fear with education and compassion was the message.

The Callahan Lions Club hosted an educational seminar by Cathy Robinson Pickett, a nationally known HIV/AIDS activist and the wife of former Callahan Lions Club member Steve Pickett.

During a 1 1/2-hour presentation, Pickett spoke frankly about how HIV is spread -- through unprotected sexual contact and direct blood exchange -- and gave practical advice on how to avoid contracting it and other blood-borne and sexually transmitted diseases.

The lingering stereotype that only young, gay, white men and intravenous drug users get HIV leaves people at risk, Pickett said.

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HIV/AIDS activist Cathy Robinson Pickett speaks Monday at the Callahan Lions Club about how the virus is spread and ways to prevent becoming infected.
AMELIA A. HART/The Times-Union

Sharing a razor, sharing tattoo needles, kissing a child's boo-boo on the playground, stopping at an accident to help when you've got a cut on your hand -- all can infect a person, Pickett said.

"It is not illicit, illegal activities. It's not who you are; it's what you do," she said.

One of every 168 Floridians now is living with HIV/AIDS, Pickett said. People over the age of 50 are one of the fastest growing populations nationwide testing positive for HIV, and one out of 46 African-American men in Florida is HIV-positive, she said.

"We have a serious problem on our hands," Pickett said. "Everybody knows more than 168 people. Everybody comes in contact every day with someone who's HIV-positive. ... If you're walking on this planet, you're at risk of this disease."

But HIV isn't the only reason people need to talk about safe sex, Pickett said.

One of every five people over the age of 13 in Florida is projected to be positive for a sexually transmitted disease , Pickett said.

Pickett stressed that passing judgment on people who have HIV/AIDS makes people afraid to get tested for HIV and afraid to tell others they have it. And that fosters an atmosphere that will only kill more.

"On this side, you've got your Cathy Robinsons, the Arthur Ashes, the Ryan Whites. And it's 'Oh, that's so sad,'" Pickett said. "On the other side, there's 'If you'd only kept your pants zipped,' ... or 'If you weren't doing what you shouldn't have.' That kind of judgment causes the disease to spread."

Statistics can't fully relate the human cost of HIV, Pickett said.

Since going public with her story, Pickett has received death threats. She also had a cross burned on her lawn the same day she registered one of her two children for kindergarten, she said.

Six years ago, someone put her and her then-husband's name on a prayer list read during a church service. The pastor said only that he hoped they die quickly, Pickett said. The person who put her on the list now is 65, has AIDS and is afraid for people to know.

"Dying alone without the support of your family, friends, minister, rabbi, priest -- that's what's sad. That's the way the majority of AIDS patients die in this country," Pickett said.

Representatives from the Nassau County Health Department and Yulee-based Healing BALM Ministries, both of which offer free, confidential and anonymous HIV testing, echoed Pickett's concerns.

Nassau County has had 86 confirmed cases of AIDS since 1997, epidemiology nurse Kim Geib said.

"The face of AIDS/HIV is very wide in Nassau County," she said. "Young, old, rich people, poor people. You really can't stereotype it."

Sexually transmitted diseases are a problem in Nassau County, Geib said. Rates for chlamydia, particularly, are on the rise, with the county averaging 84.7 cases annually from 2000-02. The disease typically has no symptoms, Geib said.