Monday, July 13, 2009

Health

A Young Woman's Battle With HIV

New autobiography highlights the impact of HIV/AIDS on young black women

Posted August 20, 2008

When Tennessee native Marvelyn Brown was diagnosed with HIV at age 19, she didn't realize that HIV could be transmitted through heterosexual contact. She was hospitalized with pneumonia, and doctors discovered she had HIV during a battery of tests, a mere three weeks after she had been infected. By writing her new autobiography, The Naked Truth: Young, Beautiful, and (HIV) Positive, the now 24-year-old says she tries to raise awareness among young people of HIV/AIDS and how it's transmitted.

Marvelyn Brown
Marvelyn Brown
The Naked Truth by Marvelyn Brown

Since her diagnosis, Brown has toured the country providing HIV education and has appeared on the Oprah Winfrey Show and America's Next Top Model. On her blog, she says that she persists in promoting HIV awareness despite all the flak she takes from people who believe she is "glamorizing" HIV/AIDS. "I contracted a 100% PREVENTABLE disease, people, which...is my message, not how glamorous I look doing it," she wrote in a recent blog posting. "Bottom line, HIV sucks, I swear."

A former high school track and basketball player, Brown worked and partied hard after high school, she says, but didn't consider herself to be in a high-risk group for HIV. Now, Brown says she hopes that her book, released Tuesday, will shed some light on HIV's impact on young black women like herself. HIV/AIDS is the leading cause of death for black women ages 25 to 34, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. An estimated 56,300 new HIV infections occurred in the United States in 2006. African-Americans—who make up just 13 percent of the United States population—accounted for about 45 percent of new HIV infections in 2006, the CDC reports. Routine HIV testing has been widely recommended by the CDC and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, which recently called for all women ages 19 to 64 to get tested.

U.S. News talked with Brown about her new book and living with HIV.

When you were diagnosed with HIV in 2003, you didn't know the disease was transmitted through heterosexual contact. Why?
I feel like it's out there, but it's not out there enough. I just couldn't make the connection because I didn't feel like it affected me. I also feel like there should've been more emphasis on it in school. My health and wellness class was basically physical education. I feel like it should be separated. There was an old man teaching us about our bodies, and I didn't want to hear about it. The pictures in our health book didn't look like me or other young people I knew.

I think teachers and parents need to educate themselves about HIV so they can pass it down to us. When they were coming up, HIV wasn't an issue for them.

Do you know how you became infected with HIV?
I became infected through unprotected sex with a former boyfriend I trusted and loved. I have reason to believe that he knew he was HIV positive, partly because of the way he acts now and also because he said he was sorry.

How have you dealt with your diagnosis?
As I started getting more information, I became scared. I wondered, "What are my last days and months going to be like?" But the time when I really wanted to start taking care of myself was when I was told that my T-cell count [a measure used to help determine when a person has crossed the threshold from HIV to AIDS] was 30-something cells away from getting full-blown AIDS.

Reader Comments

One Brave Women

My Dear Marvelyn,

Its funny how god bring people to you. You have came into my life that little moment for a reason. When I found out about your story, my heart melt, but I knew you was a soulja. You might dont remember me but did u remember exchanging numbers with a female at this masjidin DC? Well if you do then its me and i wanted to tell you that I regret not keeping in contact with such a beautiful person like you. I just read your story and you are a beautiful and brave women and you have been my inspiration. This shouldnt be a secret and may Allah keep you going sista. I love you and keep your head up.

Peace

Respect Yourself

You do not think that a man or women who does not have hiv or aids would knowly want to be with someone with hiv or aids. If you do then your crazy its enough of yall contracted with it. So find a mate that has your same situation your blood is no longer normal so do not try to mix abnormal blood with normal blood. It would be evil to try. No book, TV appeareance, or nothing you can say or do will make your blood normal. Your blood is deadly if you cut yourself, have sex on your period its deadly why should any normal person want to be in a relationship so personal they they may contract your deadly blood. The truth hurts but a horse is horse call it as it is Deadly Blood. Mistakes happen I prays you for telling your story but you can't expect a clean blood man to lay with. Sex is over for you. You should become a sex free women or if sex is that important to you get a man who has deadly blood but don't create babies. God Bless You. Find something positive to do with your time clean blood is more deadly to you then deadly blood the common cold can kill you keep that Linda to keep it real.

Knowingly Spreading HIV should be a crime

Shouldn't there be criminal penalties if an otherwise innocent person dies from HIV/AIDS that results from a known HIV positive carrier? People with HIV must bear the responsibility of their inconsiderate, selfish, and wantonly dangerous decisions to spread their disease to others through unprotected sex. These types of infectious people who can not control their sexual behavior should be locked up. Let's compare - a pervert attempts to rape a young female - he is likely to get 10-15 years in the slammer. The young female is likely traumatized for life. A HIV positive guy who knows he has HIV convinces a girlfriend to have unprotected sex. She later contracts HIV and after a painful bout with full-blown AIDS, she dies after exhausting her resources for treatment/medication. The HIV positive guy doesn't contract AIDS for several more years. What's wrong with this picture? Where is the justice?

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