BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
BAGUIO CITY – Nightspots abound in this summer
resort offering all forms of entertainment from “guest relations” services in
seedy to gay bars to bars which feature country, retro, jazz, rock,
reggae, and pop music.
Name it, you
have it. But this Yuletide season, establishments offering companionship for
male and female patrons and tourists out for a thrill were the top grossers, if
radio reports are to be believed.
This, while
the number persons affected by HIV and AIDS continues to rise in this summer
capital. It is for this reason Health officials are advocating “clean
entertainment to stop the rise of the dreaded disease. The Reproductive Health and Wellness Center
of the Baguio City Health Services Office is focusing its sights among night
entertainers.
During the
Baguio City celebration of the recent World AIDS Day, Dr. Celia Flor Brillantes,
head of the Social Hygiene Clinic of the Baguio CHSO, said education campaign
and advocacy is now focused on making night entertainers understand the idea of
a “clean entertainment” to prevent the spread of sexually acquired diseases.
Brillantes
said “clean entertainment” encourages night workers from entertaining and
mingling with costumers inside establishments and avoiding sexual contact in
the workplace or outside. Hotels and inns have registered high occupancy rates
despite expensive room rates the past season and reports have it that some if
not most women and men entertainers have been doing the entertaining inside the
more private rooms.
“We educate
our entertainers to just sit with costumers, talk with them, eat with them,
dance and entertain them but having sex with costumers should be prevented,”
she said. “With these methods of the clean entertainment, night entertainers
would avoid catching sexually acquired diseases such as STD, STI, HIV and AIDS
which have increased in the city.”
Although most
sectors see this concept as impossible, Brillantes said she was optimistic that
by educating night entertainers on effects of different sexually acquired
diseases to their lives and their families if they would be infected, there
were positive results of this campaign.
Data showed
Baguio recorded HIV cases at 21 percent increase with six to seven cases added
every year since 2013 and most of the new HIV cases were those of MSM (men
having sex with men).
Out of 300
MSM tested, nine were HIV positive, and out of the total 5,000 tested in the
city, 12 were positive including a mother and child, Brillantes said.
In 2014,
there were 6,011 total cases of HIV in the country reported to the HIV and AIDS
Registry, making the reported cases from 1984-2014 to a total of 22,527.
Meanwhile,
during recent celebration of the World AIDS Day at the Baguio Convention
Center, two HIV/AIDS positive shared their experiences as they battle the
deadly disease. They encouraged the audience, mostly night entertainers to
avoid sexual contact with different partners to avoid acquiring and spreading
the diseases.
The recent
World AIDS Day celebration with the theme “Getting to zero… zero new HIV
infection, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths” was headed by the
city government in coordination with Baguio City Surveillance Team, the Baguio
AIDS Watch Council and the Baguio Association of Bars and Entertainment
Society.
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