OUR MISSION

SageHealth Network is dedicated to promoting the sexual health, socialization and positive aging of older adults and seniors. We offer unique health promotion workshops and social events focusing on older adults and seniors' needs and overall wellbeing.




Saturday, March 21, 2009

Aging Baby Boomers and Seniors Are at Risk for HIV

By Pj Huffstutter, Los Angeles Times
January 15, 2009


Jane Fowler thinks it’s about time college students had “the talk” with their grandparents. She doesn’t mean grandmothers and grandfathers explaining the facts of life. She wants kids to explain safe sex to their elders.

It’s part of a broader message the 72-year-old has advocated for more than a decade. Ever since she contracted HIV when she was in her 50s, Fowler has made it her mission to help aging Baby Boomers and members of her generation avoid her mistakes.

“Once people get past their own embarrassment and understand grandparents today are still sexually active, they realize I’m right,” said Fowler, who spoke at a recent safe-sex event at Kansas State University. “Their grandparents face the same risks of sexually transmitted diseases as they do.”

The over-50 crowd is a relatively small segment of the nation’s at-risk group for sexually transmitted diseases. Approximately four times as many HIV diagnoses occurred in people ages 25 to 44 as in those 50 and older, according to a 2005 report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Still, medical experts agree that older Americans often are among the most overlooked and, therefore, one of the more vulnerable populations.

Little funding

They point out that most funding for preventive education over the last two decades has been aimed at the traditional high-risk populations, such as teenagers, gay people and urban residents.

Others, however, say that many Baby Boomers were young enough when the public first became aware of the AIDS crisis that they should have gotten plenty of exposure to safe-sex campaigns.

Many older patients feel uneasy discussing sexual behavior with their physicians, according to AARP research. Young doctors, too, can be uncomfortable talking about STD risks with people old enough to be their parents or grandparents, according to a recent study backed by the National Institutes of Health.

Considering that people are living longer than previous generations have, and enjoying extended sex lives because of hormone therapy and erectile-dysfunction drugs, there’s a growing concern that the Baby Boom generation and their elders don’t understand that getting older doesn’t make one immune.

That concern is fueling a national push among public health officials and educators for more prevention efforts aimed at those who are firmly in their golden years.

In Arizona, volunteers regularly have passed out free condoms at community centers, and state health workers in Florida host safe-sex programs in retirement communities. In Broward County, Fla., the Senior HIV Intervention Project recruits retirees throughout the region to become “safe-sexperts” who can persuade their neighbors to get tested for STDs.

At the University of Michigan Health System, enough patients were concerned about the effect of aging on intimacy that a clinic was opened in Ann Arbor in 2006 devoted to dealing with the sexual concerns of the 60-and-older crowd. And in Ohio, Professor Nancy Orel and staff at Bowling Green State University have preached about the risks of casual sex and offered free HIV tests.

Talk to grandparents

Orel sells the idea of using condoms and getting tested for HIV as part of serving as a role model for their younger loved ones. But to the under graduate students taking her gerontology classes at Bowling Green, the roles are reversed. One of the assignments Orel gives is for students to go home, find out what their grandparents know about HIV and discuss safe-sex practices.

“Initially, some of the students are hesitant. But a lot of them are surprised at how open the conversations can be,” said Orel, director of the university’s gerontology department.

A study published last summer in the New England Journal of Medicine reported that most of the 3,005 American adults surveyed, age 57 to 85,continued to have sex two to three times each month.

But, since turning 50, only 38 percent of the men and 22 percent of the women had had a discussion with their doctors about sex, according to the report funded by the National Institutes of Health.

Edward O. Laumann, a professor at the University of Chicago who studies human sexuality and is one of the study’s authors, said older Americans should know better than to have unprotected sex. When the HIV/AIDS epidemic started, he pointed out, many of them were young enough to have been bombarded by public education efforts.

“Educating them isn’t going to affect anything, Laumann said, “and it’s a waste of money, particularly when there’s other vulnerable groups that need the resources anyway.”

Part of the problem with figuring out exactly what risks older Americans face comes from a lack of testing data, said Spencer Lieb, senior epidemiologist at the Bureau of HIV/AIDS at the Florida Department of Health.

He said that although the number of HIV and AIDS patients in the over-50 age group nationwide had grown in recent years, some of the increase was attributed to people who are living longer with the virus or disease, thanks to improvements in therapy treatments.

But without widespread testing, “we don’t really know what the true prevalence [of STD infection] is in this group,” Lieb said. “There’s reason to think, at least anecdotally, this is a combustible situation that is being overlooked.”

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Finally....Speed Dating for Seniors

Speed dating is coming to St. Paul’s L’Amoreaux Centre in Scarborough! The popular social phenomenon that has been such a huge hit with the younger set is now finally available to older adults and seniors 55+.

St. Paul's L'Amoreaux Centre is hosting Companion Connections, a new social event specifically designed for 55+adults on Saturday, April 4, 2009 from 1:00-3:00-pm. Companion Connections is a unique way for older adults and seniors to meet peers and establish new friendships. The goal is to form new friendships and social connections among those 55+ years of age by working collaboratively with several seniors’ agencies.

Companion Connections is modeled on a typical speed dating event in which women stay seated and men rotate every 7-10 minutes. If individuals hit it off and both indicate an interest in the other by checking their name, their personal contact info will be given to their match. Contact info is only given out if both parties have checked off each other’s name. This fun, exciting and innovative introductory event enables participants to meet 20 other single seniors in one evening.

St. Paul’s L’Amoreaux Centre’s Executive Director, Larry Burke, emphasizes the importance of social events for 55+ audiences. “We’re excited to host this unique collaboration with several partner agencies to encourage socialization among older adults and seniors,” Burke states. “We're looking forward to a successful gathering of individuals who are interested in expanding their social circles and creating new relationships in a welcoming and safe setting.”

Participants will enjoy an afternoon of fun, friends, and goody bags to take home. Refreshments will be generously provided by Steeles Deli Warehouse in Thornhill, Ontario, a long time supporter of St. Paul’s. Transportation is available through a participating seniors’ centre or St. Paul’s Transportation Department for a small fee. Seats are on a first come, first serve basis and will fill up quickly. The last day to register for the event is Saturday, March 21st.

Companion Connections aims to encourage meaningful relationships for older adults and seniors. Other agencies that have pledged to promote the event to their clients span the GTA: North York Seniors Centre, Bernard Betel Centre for Creative Living, Taylor Place, Markham Seniors Centre, West Hill Community Services, Scarborough Support Services, and Harmony Hall Centre for Seniors. St. Paul’s staff is so optimistic that the event will be a success, they have scheduled a second date in September 2009 and there are plans to schedule future events for multicultural groups.

For more information and to reserve your space, please contact Michele Cauch at St. Paul’s L’Amoreaux Centre 416-493-3333 ext 271.