Pubdate: Wed, 03 Jun 2009 Source: Terrace Standard (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Terrace Standard Contact: http://www.terracestandard.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1329 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?163 (HIV/AIDS) GROUP BATTLES AIDS EPIDEMIC DISTRESSINGLY HIGHER levels of HIV/AIDS within the northern native community continue to reinforce the need for a variety of prevention and care programs, says the chair of a task force devoted to the task. Emma Palmantier said the challenge is magnified because there are higher levels of HIV/AIDS in younger people and younger people now make up a majority of the native population. "The key factor is injection drug use - that's a real concern. There is generally riskier behaviour among young people," she said. Palmantier is chair of the Northern B.C. Aboriginal HIV/AIDS Task Force which is made up of representatives of the more than 63 aboriginal communities in the north. She and other members of the task force were guests of the Kitselas First Nation just outside of Terrace this week at a session designed to update the task force's progress. Formed in 2005, the task force works on a political as well as community level, said Palmantier. "What we're building is awareness and education," she said. Available statistics indicate that about 22 per cent of new HIV positive tests and 16.2 per cent of new AIDS cases were aboriginal despite aboriginals making up only 4 - 5 per cent of the overall Canadian population. And, says Palmantier, the spread of HIV/AIDS among native people is as alarming in urban centres nowadays as it is within northern native communities. Community-level work includes providing information about clean needles and condoms. Education, prevention and awareness efforts are focussed on younger people with "training the trainer" workshops, Palmantier said. "We can never forget about our youth. Young people really are our future," she said of the need to concentrate on programs for that age group. Palmantier also points to poverty and lack of work which can then lead younger people to undertake risk-filled measures. "We have our younger women undertaking survival sex trade work and our younger men selling drugs, all just to put food on the table," she said. "This is really a multi-level issue," Palmantier said of HIV/AIDS. The big challenge for the task force is securing enough money so that it has a stable operating budget to advance its programs, Palmantier continued. She spends a lot of her time applying for grants from private and public sources. Promoting the task force's work is also why it has regular sessions with community representatives to keep everyone up to date on what has happened, what is being planned and what is needed, Palmantier added. Upcoming programs include a session in Prince George in early July for young people. In Prince George, the task force's host agency is Carrier-Sekani Family Services. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom