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JKUAT Students Develop Sophie Bot Sexual Reproductive Health App

JKUAT Students Develop Sophie Bot Sexual Reproductive Health App

2017-02-13

A group of six students from Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology created SophieBot, an application revolutionizing access to sexual health information in Kenya. According to a post on the JKUAT website, “Sophie is an intelligent system that is fed with verified information on sexuality and sexual reproductive health and relays the information to its users through conversations that are driven by text or voice chats. Her features include anonymous forums and digital chat bots built in on the app, Facebook, Telegram, Messenger and Twitter.”

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Likened to the Artificial Intelligence Apple program Siri, Sophie Bot sources its answers from 10,000 base questions. Striving to be better with every user who signs up to the program, the SophieBot team continues to make changes to ensure it serves users better. The innovation features a chatbot where users can ask questions to Sophie. It also includes a forum where individuals could anonymously ask questions to a community of users.

 

The young group of passionate millennials is lead by Irving Amukusa, an undergraduate student studying Actuarial Science. He is a self-taught developer with a passion for tech. Derick Mureithi a Software developer who was ranked first runner-up in Hack4Farming by Awhere with Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation holds the title of Chief Technology Officer. The team of six also includes Rashid Beduni Mwagonga, Nicholas Wambua, John Nzau Makau and the only woman on the team Beverly Mutindi, Chief Financial Officer.

 

Although the team has faced several challenges including funding the idea, they got their big break in 2016 when they exhibited their idea at the Nailab. According to Business Daily, The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in collaboration with Nailab, hosted the event. SophieBot was among the lucky 4 announced as winning innovations around sex involved in an iAccelerator programme. The app is set to demystify the sensitive subject matter of sex, sexually transmitted disease and more by giving the youth access to the information right on their phones.

 

Music Video About Vaginas Reminds Men They Don’t Control Women’s Bodies

Music Video About Vaginas Reminds Men They Don’t Control Women’s Bodies

No form of female genital mutilation is OK.

Experts have long held that allowing any form of female genital mutilation to exist is damaging, and regressive.

But since some people aren’t convinced of that fact, the nonprofit Integrate UK, which works toward fostering equality and integration, released a catchy music video in December to address the issue. Titled “#MyClitoris,” the video took on significant meaning this week: Monday marked Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation Day, an annual awareness campaign aimed at ending FGM.

“Seems it’s up to us girls to be quite tough,” the girls in the video sing. “If we need to spell it out, get your mitts off my muff.”

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FGM involves the total or partial removal of external female genitalia for no medical benefit, and comes with a host of serious health consequences, including heavy bleeding, sepsis and infertility, among other issues. Communities perform the procedure as a way to keep girls “pure” and prevent them from having pre-marital sex.

At least 200 million girls and women alive today have undergone female genital mutilation, according to the United Nations. The number of women who are at risk in the U.S. has tripled in recent years. 

Set against a light pink backdrop, the girls in the “#MyClitoris” video wear floral crowns and pearls, and gently tap their feet to a folksy tune. They take ownership of the overtly feminine expectations of young women and turn them on their head as they sing about their vaginas, clitorises and the fact that they alone can decide what happens to their bodies.

“They say it’s OK for a little bit to be taken away from my clit,” the song continues. “No, thank you.”

The video, which decidedly challenges the idea that men can control women’s bodies by disfiguring them, was produced in response to a controversial op-ed The Economist published in June. The column suggested that outright banning all forms of FGM isn’t working. Instead, the author wrote, governments should consider banning the worst forms of female genital mutilation and allowing trained professionals to perform the types that aren’t as harmful.

“Instead of trying to stamp FGM out entirely, governments should … try to persuade parents to choose the least nasty version, or none at all,” the author wrote. “However distasteful, it is better to have a symbolic nick from a trained health worker than to be butchered in a back room by a village elder.”

The concept of medicalizing FGM has been suggested in the past. In 2010, the American Academy of Pediatrics released a statement saying that performing a “ritual nick” could help wipe out the practice. But some experts say that was actually a damaging setback to ending FGM.

Medical experts across the globe have expressed their opposition to allowing any form of FGM to continue.

Last year, the World Health Organization issued its first-ever medical guidelines on FGM. The guidelines help doctors identify cases of FGM, and treat the issues those patients could present, including depression and problems with sexual health.

The guidelines also urge doctors to treat FGM as abuse, not a cultural practice.

“If we’re thinking this a cultural issue and we don’t want to get involved, we are not safeguarding people at risk,” Comfort Momoh, a midwife who treats FGM survivors at Guy’s and St. Thomas’ hospital in London, said at a health conference last year. “FGM is everybody’s business.”

Male contraceptive gel passes monkey test

Male contraceptive gel passes monkey test

2017-02-07

By Michelle Roberts Health editor, BBC News online

An experimental new type of male contraceptive that blocks sperm flow with a gel has been successful in monkey trials.

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Vasalgel acts as a physical barrier once injected into the tubes that sperm would swim down to the penis.

The company behind it says a two-year trial, published in Basic and Clinical Andrology, shows the gel works and is safe – at least in primates.

It hopes to have enough evidence to begin tests in men within a few years.

If those get funding and go well – two big “ifs” – it will seek regulatory approval to make the gel more widely available to men.

It would be the first new type of male contraceptive to hit the market in many decades.

At the moment, men have two main options of contraceptive – wear a condom to catch the sperm, or have a sterilising operation (vasectomy) to cut or seal the two tubes that carry sperm to the penis from where they are made in the testicles.

Vasalgel has the same end effect as vasectomy, but researchers hope it should be easier to reverse if a man later decides he wants to have children.

In theory, another injection should dissolve the gel plug.

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That worked in early tests in rabbits, but the researchers have yet to prove the same in monkeys and man.

Under anaesthetic

The idea behind Vasalgel is not new.

Another experimental male birth control gel – RISUG (reversible inhibition of sperm under guidance) – that works in a similar way to Vasalgel is being tested in men in India.

Unlike RISUG, Vasalgel is not designed to impair the swimming sperm.

It merely blocks their path while still letting other fluid through, according to the manufacturer.

Both gels are given as an injection, under anaesthetic, and are meant to offer long-acting contraception.

The monkey trial

The University of California researchers tested the gel on 16 adult male monkeys, 10 of whom were already fathers.

The monkeys were monitored for a week after getting the injection and were then released back into their an enclosure to rejoin some fertile females.

Mating did occur, but none of the female monkeys became pregnant over the course of the study, which included two full breeding periods for some of the animals.

Few of the male monkeys had side-effects, although one did need an operation because the injection did not go to plan and damaged one of his tubes.

Allan Pacey, professor of andrology at the University of Sheffield, said: “The study shows that, in adult male monkeys at least, the gel is an effective form of contraception.

“But in order for it to have a chance of replacing the traditional surgical method of vasectomy, the authors need to show that the procedure is reversible.”

He said there had been very little commercial interest from pharmaceutical companies in this kind of a approach.

The non-profit company researching Vasalgel, the Parsemus Foundation, has used grants and fundraising to get this far.

Prof Pacey said: “The idea of a social venture company to develop the idea is intriguing.

“I would imagine there is a worldwide market for a new male contraceptive, but trials in humans and more long-term safety data are required before we will know if it is a success.”

This type of contraceptive wouldn’t protect against sexually transmitted infections such as HIV.

But in terms of willingness, experts believe men would be up for trying new contraceptives, such as a gel.

Dr Anatole Menon-Johanssonm from the sexual health charity Brook, said: “Some men do want to be part of the solution and do their part.

“If you can have more options available then maybe more men would go for it.”

He said the idea of a “reversible vasectomy” was desirable, whereas asking some men to take hormones to control their fertility might be “a big ask”.

Ulster University research to maximise sexual wellbeing for men and their partners after a prostate cancer diagnosis

Ulster University research to maximise sexual wellbeing for men and their partners after a prostate cancer diagnosis

World-leading researchers at Ulster University are set to lead a £430,000 pioneering  international research programme in the UK, the US and Canada, which aims to improve the sexual health of men, and their partners, after a prostate cancer diagnosis.

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer among men and treatments can lead to a number of physical and emotional challenges. In Northern Ireland there are over 8,000 men living with and after prostate cancer and there are over 330,000 men living with the disease UK wide. More than three-quarters (76 per cent) of those who have had treatment for prostate cancer report experiencing erectile dysfunction.

Ulster University’s new three year study will see the creation of three new flexible support packages designed to address individual needs and empower men and their partners to manage their sexual health challenges prior to and after treatment.

The resources include a web-based sexual recovery programme for men and their partners, an engagement tool to ensure quality communication between health professionals and men and partners, and an online sexual health training programme for health professionals caring for men living with prostate cancer. 

Ulster University’s research is supported with a £400,000 grant from the TrueNTH global initiative led by the Movember Foundation in collaboration with Prostate Cancer UK. A further £30,000 has also been awarded from the HSC Public Health Agency to further support the study.

The research will be led by Professor Eilís McCaughan at Ulster University’s Institute of Nursing and Health Research alongside colleagues from the Northern Ireland Cancer Centre at Belfast City Hospital; Ninewells Hospital, Dundee; University of Surrey; University of Southampton; University of Michigan; and University of Toronto.

Ulster University’s Professor Eilís McCaughan said: “Sexual dysfunction experienced by men after prostate cancer treatment can have a devastating effect on them as individuals and on their relationships.

“Men are often reluctant to discuss personal sexual issues and there is also evidence that health professionals have limited time available to provide necessary levels of care and support for men and their partners.

“The results of this new research will provide much needed guidance and help restore sexual health to a level of satisfaction for both the man and his partner.

“The new resources we develop will provide them both with crucial need-to-know information on the possible consequences of the different forms of treatment and where to seek information and support to self-manage their condition.”

Dr Sarah Cant, Director of TrueNTH and Outcomes at Prostate Cancer UK said: “When it comes to treating erectile dysfunction following prostate cancer treatment, early support and treatment is vital. This programme is a tremendous step towards ensuring that no man who has been treated for prostate cancer is left to deal with erectile dysfunction alone. We look forward to the results of the project and hope it will lead to improved support and experiences for all men.”

Paul Villanti, Executive Director of Programs of the Movember Foundation said:

“The Movember Foundation is committed to improving the lives of men with prostate cancer through the creation of our TrueNTH program. TrueNTH is a nautical term; it’s a compass point, it’s an idea that if we can understand the individual patients’ needs when they are first diagnosed, we can help them navigate towards the ultimate outcome they want to see. The funding of this programme would not be possible without the continued support from our Movember community, to whom we’re extremely grateful for their efforts.”

Hepatitis A on the rise among gay and bisexual men

Hepatitis A on the rise among gay and bisexual men

2017-02-02

Public Health England has identified an increase of Hepatitis A cases across England.

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The increase has been noticed mostly among gay and bisexual men, some of which are associated with travel to Spain. While the numbers are small, Public Health England say it’s unusual to see so many linked cases.

Dr Michael Edelstein, Consultant Epidemiologist in the Hepatitis and Blood Safety Department, said: “Public Health England is aware of an increase in hepatitis A cases, where we believe the infection has been spread through sex, most cases occurring in gay and bisexual men.

“Hepatitis A can be prevented by practising good personal hygiene, so we recommend gay and bisexual men wash their hands after sex and change condoms between any kind of sex to reduce their risk of getting hepatitis A.

“Those who are concerned can seek advice from sexual health services about whether they would benefit from hepatitis A vaccination.”

According to Public Health England, symptoms of Hepatitis A can include nausea and vomiting; diarrhoea; loss of appetite; weight loss; jaundice; itchy skin; and a short, mild, flu-like illness.

Some people may have no symptoms at all, but can still pass on the virus to others.

While the disease is mainly spread through contaminated food or from person to person through inadequate hand-washing, it can also be spread through sex, including both oral and anal sex.

More information about Hepatitis A can be found on the NHS website.

From chocolate to beetroot, 5 foods to boost your libido

From chocolate to beetroot, 5 foods to boost your libido

Spice up your love life on Valentine’s night by slipping these surprisingly sexy foods into your diet.

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It’s nearly Valentine’s Day, and talk of love is in the air.

And while we all like to think we have a raging inferno burning inside, as many as one in five Brits experience reduced libido at some stage in their lives, with many struggling to understand why.

In fact there can be many reasons why our sex drive diminishes – age, stress, fatigue, hormonal imbalances and emotional concerns in both men and women have a part to play, and for many the issue can come and go.

Luckily, there is much that can be done to help you get back into your stride, and some of them start in the kitchen. Even if you don’t have a problem but want to ramp things up, consider that certain foods have long been heralded as libido boosters and fertility supports.

Beetroot

Bright red beetroot is a great bedroom booster, particularly for males who may have lost the spring in their step.

A good source of a compound called nitric oxide that naturally helps to increase blood flow by causing blood vessels to dilate, beetroot is a good food to support sexual performance and may help your man go that extra mile.

Watermelon

Another sexy food, wet-and-wild watermelon is rich in a whole host of nutrients while also boasting a high level of an amino acid called citrulline, which has been shown to help aid sex drive by increasing blood flow to our nether regions.

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Try to eat the rind and even some of the seeds if possible as a lot of goodness is found here. Blend into a smoothie if you don’t like the crunch.

Maca

Not for nothing has this root vegetable superfood been dubbed nature’s Viagra. Used for many hundreds of years as a fertility support and libido booster in Peruvian culture, research has proved its ability to increase strength, stamina, energy, fertility and libido.

t does this by supporting our adrenal glands, helping to balance sex hormone production and make the body more resilient to the daily grind. A winning combination in the bedroom for men and women!

Try adding a teaspoon of maca powder to a morning smoothie, yoghurt, cereals or even to cake recipes.

Dark chocolate

Before you reach for the Milky Bar, remember we are talking about good quality dark chocolate here, preferably above 70% cocoa solids.

This rich source of cacao is naturally high in a number of compounds that are very supportive of body and mind.  Magnesium helps to relax muscles and ease tension in the mind, as well as supporting the production of serotonin, the body’s happy neurotransmitter.

Chocolate also contains phenylethylamine – a compound that we have been shown to produce when we are in love.
Given that low mood and stress can be strongly linked with lower sex drive, a few squares of dark chocolate daily is a good way to pump up the passion.

Pumpkin seeds

They aren’t the sexiest of foods, but pumpkin seeds have a plethora of benefits.

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Being high in zinc which is essential for mood, mind and hormone balance as well as sperm health, they are a great support for sexual health in men and women.

They are also loaded with libido-supporting vitamins B, E, C, D and K and minerals including calcium, potassium, niacin and phosphorous, as well as being a great source of arginine which research continually shows is essential for sex drive.

Alice Mackintosh is a Nutritional Food Therapist. For more information, visit her website.

IU study examines sexual risk-taking, HIV prevention among older adults in sub-Saharan Africa

IU study examines sexual risk-taking, HIV prevention among older adults in sub-Saharan Africa

One of the most common myths around older adults is that they are not sexually active. But a recent study conducted by researchers at Indiana University found that older men and women do maintain sexual relationships even into their 80s and beyond. Since older adults are often ignored in sexual health education, the possibility for HIV transmission is heightened.

The study, conducted by Molly Rosenberg, assistant professor of epidemiology and biostatics in the IU School of Public Health-Bloomington, was recently published in the Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes. It looked at the unmet needs for HIV prevention among older adults in sub-Saharan Africa, one of the first studies of its kind to report sexual risk-taking among older adults in that region.

“Our study found that older adults are sexually active, and they report sexual risk behaviors — low condom use, casual sex and multiple recent partners — that are consistent with sexual transmission of disease,” Rosenberg said. “This marks a huge potential for ongoing HIV transmission in older South Africans, and highlights the need for expanded HIV testing and counseling that can change behavior and help reduce new HIV transmission.”

Researchers analyzed data from 5,059 men and women age 40 and older from the study “Health and Aging in Africa: Longitudinal Studies of INDEPTH Communities,” conducted in rural Mpumalanga province in South Africa. Of those enrolled, 46 percent were men, 51 percent were currently married, and 46 percent had no formal education. The research looked at HIV prevalence, described their sexual behaviors and compared those behaviors across HIV status categories, using both self-reported and laboratory-confirmed HIV status data.

Older adults receive little attention when it comes to HIV prevention research and interventions, although growing evidence shows they make up a fast-increasing proportion of people living with HIV, in part because of the impact of large-scale HIV treatment on reducing deaths from the disease. Research on the group remains scarce, however, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, where most of the world’s 37 million people infected with HIV live, and prevention measures focus mostly on younger adults.

“This is really the first generation of South Africans we’ve seen aging with HIV,” Rosenberg said.

Overall, HIV prevalence among people in the study was high, at 23 percent, and did not differ between men and women. About one-third of respondents reported never having been tested for HIV, and among those with confirmed infections, nearly half did not yet know they were living with HIV.

Regarding sexual activity, more than half of participants reported at least one sex partner within the past two years. Men tended to maintain sexual partnerships at relatively high rates across older ages, only dropping to 52 percent at age 80 and older. The proportion of women with recent sexual partners decreased more steeply with age, dropping to 6 percent at age 80 and older.

Individuals who reported condom use decreased with age in both men and women, as did those reporting casual or anonymous sex. Condom use was highest, at 75 percent, among those who were HIV positive, but only if they knew their status. Of those who were HIV positive but unaware of their status, only 27 percent regularly used condoms.

One in 10 participants also reported that their most recent sex partners were casual or anonymous. Casual sex was lowest among HIV-negative adults, at 9 percent, and higher among both HIV-positive groups (29 percent of those aware of their HIV status and 18 percent of those who were unaware). The results, Rosenberg said, show not only a commonality among sexually active young people and older people, but also the need for targeted intervention among older adults.

The study calls for inclusion of older adults in HIV prevention, with messages created directly for that demographic, and intensified counseling and motivation about sexual transmission risk and universal HIV testing.

“To control the HIV epidemic in South Africa, we need to reach everyone who is vulnerable to HIV,” Rosenberg said. “And our paper shows that older adults should clearly be considered as HIV-vulnerable.”

The Health and Aging in Africa: Longitudinal Studies of INDEPTH Communities study was funded by the National Institute on Aging. Lisa Berkman, Harvard School of Public Health, is principal investigator. HAALSI is nested within the Agincourt Health and Socio-Demographic Surveillance System, led by Stephen Tollman and Kathleen Kahn, with funding from Wellcome Trust, University of the Witwatersrand, and Medical Research Council, South Africa. Rosenberg’s paper, “Sexual Behaviors and HIV Status: A Population-Based Study Among Older Adults in Rural South Africa,” was a collaborative effort with key co-authors from the Harvard School of Public Health and the University of the Witwatersrand.

8 lies men tell their doctors– and why they need to come clean

8 lies men tell their doctors– and why they need to come clean

2017-01-25

When it comes to talking to their doctors about their health or admitting that they have a problem, most men stretch the truth, leave out important details or flat-out lie.

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In fact, a little more than 50 percent of men between the ages of 55 and 64 said they’re usually honest with their doctors, while only approximately 38 percent said they’re always honest, a survey by NetQuote found.

What’s more, 53 percent of men said their health isn’t something they talk about, a survey by the Cleveland Clinic found.

Here, experts weigh in with some of the most common lies men tell their doctors and the reasons why they need to come clean.

1. “I don’t have erectile dysfunction.”
Between 15 and 30 million men under age 65 in the U.S. have erectile dysfunction, but most men won’t readily admit it.

“When they come into the office they always come in for another excuse,” said Dr. Dudley Danoff, a urologist in Los Angeles and author of “The Ultimate Guide to Male Sexual Health.

But when they’re on their way out, they’ll ask for samples of erectile dysfunction medication.

Erectile dysfunction doesn’t only affect a guy’s sex life, it’s also linked to other medical conditions like thyroid dysfunction, type 2 diabetes and atherosclerosis.

“Something can be done about it, but men have to fess up and let their doctor help them,” Danoff said.

2. “I don’t have problems urinating.”
It’s common for men to hold back when it comes to talking about their bathroom habits, but going more frequently and experiencing pain or discomfort can all be signs of prostate problems— which are common in men over 50, said Dr. Berry Pierre, a board-certified internal medicine physician in Boynton Beach, Florida.

3. “I’m not depressed.”
Men who have depression are more likely to brush it off, try to “talk” themselves out of it, or socially withdraw in order to cope.

“Men are less likely than women to express emotional vulnerability,” said Dr. Will Courtenay, a psychotherapist in Oakland, California.

Not only can depression affect their quality of life, but men with depression are at risk for suicide.

In fact, suicide rates in men between 45 and 64 increased 43 percent between 1999 and 2014, according to a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

4. “We have sex all the time.”
A healthy sex life is important for a healthy relationship and overall health and well-being, but a large percentage of couples are in sexless marriages.

In fact, 20 percent of married people between 18 and 60 have not had sex in the last month and 6 percent have not had sex in over a year, according to a survey by The Austin Institute for the Study of Family and Culture.

Men who are not having sex regularly aren’t likely to bring it up because they’re embarrassed, but talking to their doctors about it can rule out medical conditions and help them find solutions.

5. “My bowel habits are normal.”
Men who have bleeding, pain or changes in their bowel habits often downplay their symptoms, don’t disclose all the details, or even deny it, said Dr. Cedrek McFadden, a double-board certified surgeon in colorectal and general surgery in Greenville, South Carolina.

Men are more prone to be tight-lipped because they’re embarrassed or fearful of what their doctors will discover.

Yet it’s important that men tell their doctors about their symptoms because they could be symptoms of things like diverticulitis, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), a fissure, an abscess or colon cancer.

Although they dread having a colonoscopy, the prep work is the worst part of it and it can detect colon cancer and when found early, be cured, McFadden said.

6. “I don’t snore.”
True, men can’t hear themselves snore, but when their partners tell their doctors that they do, men may deny it or brush it off as insignificant, said Michael J. Breus, Ph.D., a clinical sleep specialist in Los Angeles and author of “The Power of When.”

Yet snoring, and pauses in breathing, are often a tell tale sign of obstructive sleep apnea, a condition which affects more than 18 million Americans and can lead to high blood pressure, heart disease and type-2 diabetes, among others.

7. “I see—and hear—just fine.”
Men consistently lie or aren’t entirely truthful about how poor their vision and hearing have become, probably because of the stigma attached to growing old.

Yet having regular exams and being truthful can identify problems before they become more severe.

8. “My blood pressure is normal.”
It’s common for men with high blood pressure, even if it’s well controlled, to leave it out of the medical history questionnaire, said Dr. Jennifer Dean, a family and cosmetic dentist in San Diego, California.

Yet neglecting to their doctors, especially their dentist, about it could be serious. Anesthetics for dental procedures that contain epinephrine can increase blood pressure and put a middle-aged man at risk for a heart incident, she said.

Julie Revelant is a health journalist and a consultant who provides content marketing and copywriting services for the healthcare industry. She’s also a mom of two. Learn more about Julie at revelantwriting.com.

 

 

Bisexual student: Sex ed classes left me believing lesbian sex wasn’t ‘real’

Bisexual student: Sex ed classes left me believing lesbian sex wasn’t ‘real’

2017-01-17

My sex education was basically a disaster.

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Aged 11, it involved an oversimplified picture book. My teachers were awkward about it, which meant I was awkward about it too.

So my first same-sex experience involved a lot of uneducated fumbling on my part and me not being quite sure what to do. My partner did, but that didn’t stop my nervousness levels being through the roof.

Can lesbians have real sex?

That was around five years ago. And even now I can’t help but feel like I shouldn’t be getting up close and personal with other women, because what can we really do?

I can’t tell you the amount of times I’ve been told that women can’t really have sex with each other.

Thank the lord, though, that the education had my back covered when it came to the first time I slept with a man.

Because all that matters, isn’t it? Remember Mean Girls: If you have sex, you’ll get pregnant or get chlamydia and die.

Wrong.

UK letting LGBTIs down on sex ed

LGBTI students are at even more of a risk than their straight counterparts. Why? Because they’re barely educated about the protection that is there for them. In fact, they may not be educated about sex at all.

They’re not taught how to safely get down and dirty with each other. That is awful. The whole point of sex education is to help keep us all safe, after all.

Unfortunately, the UK education system currently doesn’t cover this. In fact the British government has just decided not to make LGBTI-inclusive sex and relationships education compulsory.

Thousands of people all over the country are just as disappointed as I am by that irresponsible decision.

Sexual health charity The Terrence Higgins Trust’s End The Silence Report, explored the need for LGBTI inclusive sex ed. It found only 5% of young people were taught about LGBTI sex and relationships. But 97% of the students polled thought it should be.

Blocking sex ed for the sake of religious schools

One Conservative Member of Parliament voted against inclusive, compulsory sex ed because there was insufficient protection for religious schools that oppose homosexuality.

I am tolerant of those who follow the mainstream religions, of course. But I’m not tolerant of homophobia. For that MP religious freedom was more important than protecting people from the toxic shame homophobia creates.

A lot of young people start questioning their sexuality towards the end of primary school or in high school. The education system currently does nothing to help them.

Many young people are never told ‘hey there’s this jazzy thing where you can be attracted to men and women and it’s totally fine’. Nobody tells them ‘if you are not interested in having sex at all, you’re not weird, you’re just asexual’.

We’re not promoting homosexuality. It’s not some fancy club where you get a glitter shower on entry and unlimited access to Beyoncé’s albums. We just want to educate and to be educated.

And I have high hopes for exactly that. That is undoubtedly the only way any progress will actually be made.

Students teaching themselves

I am unapologetically an LGBTI activist. And part of my battle involves being an incredibly active committee member at National Student Pride. So I was absolutely ecstatic that our event this year focuses on sex education and the need for good sex and relationships education in schools.

Proper, inclusive sex ed can free people of the stress and mental health issues that can come from having to figure out your sexuality alone. They will no longer be alone. So let’s liberate our youth, and get down and jiggy with sex ed.

Afghan asylum seekers resort to sex work in Athens

Afghan asylum seekers resort to sex work in Athens

In the rundown Pedion Areos Park, older men walk slowly by young asylum seekers before agreeing on a price for sex.

Athens, Greece – Mahmoud looks out over the chaotic mess of rooftops and aerials and towards the neglected park he now calls home. He’s wearing a red hoodie, blue jeans and a black cap. Everything suggests he is a typical 20-year-old, apart perhaps from the jagged scar on his brow. 

“I am ashamed about what I do for money, but I will tell you,” he says.

The Afghan asylum seeker clasps his hands tightly in front of him as he speaks. “I didn’t know anyone when I arrived in Athens,” he begins. “Life was very difficult and it still is. I don’t have a home so I sleep every night in a park nearby.

“I had only two options when I arrived – one was to become a thief or a drug dealer,” Mahmoud explains. “But I am not that kind of person.

“The other option was to stay in the park and have sex with older men, or anyone … that asked for it for five or 10 euros [around $5 and $10] ….”

His only shelter is a cheap tent that he shares with an Iranian asylum seeker. Perched on the concrete roof of a small maintenance building hidden among the trees of Pedion Areos Park, it offers little protection from the cold. A bag of oranges provides breakfast, lunch and dinner.

Mahmoud says the money he makes selling sex only covers the cost of his daily food. He cannot afford to save anything.

He speaks regretfully about his work but sees no way out.

“This is my only source of money now,” he says. “I’ve made a mistake, and now I’m deep in this s***.”

But Mahmoud isn’t alone. Pedion Areos Park has become a hub of illegal male prostitution, sometimes involving refugees as young as 15. 

Greece has strict laws regulating prostitution. Sex workers must register, be aged over 18, legal residents in Greece and work in a licensed brothel. Despite this, illegal street prostitutes, who are often migrants and refugees, are estimated to outnumber licensed prostitutes by 20 to one.

Licensed sex workers have fortnightly sexual health checks and access to free treatment for sexually transmitted diseases. Unlicensed street sex workers, like Mahmoud, do not.

Shopping for sex

While the majority of Athens’ sex workers are female, Pedion Areos has long been a hot spot for male sex work.

The park, although grand and sprawling, has, like its inhabitants, been largely ignored. The large statue of King Constantine I that stands at its entrance has been covered with graffiti. Used condoms and tissues litter the ground.  

Those familiar with the park say that the majority of the sex workers there are Albanian, Bulgarian and Romanian.

Neno, a Bulgarian Roma, arrived in Athens eight years ago and has been a sex worker in the park ever since. He says he doesn’t particularly mind the work, but that it doesn’t pay well.

“A lot of people hate this job, they don’t want to be here,” he says. “For me, it’s OK. I don’t have a problem with it. Just the money isn’t good.”

Neno isn’t homeless. He lives in a small town to the southeast of Athens which is popular with tourists, and takes the bus into the capital each weekday. The bus stops directly outside the park.

At the weekends, he makes a little extra money playing guitar in tavernas along the coast.  

For Neno, being a sex worker is a job like any other. For Mahmoud and the park’s other homeless residents, it is a desperate attempt to survive. They spend their mornings waiting and warming themselves by fires started in steel cans, into which they put anything that will burn, often producing a choking smoke. 

“The Greek guys [clients] don’t come in the day because they think they might get caught,” Mahmoud explains. “They wait until later to come to the park, when they’ll be safer.”

Business begins in the late afternoon as the winter sun starts to set and the few dog-walkers and runners leave the park. Their busiest time is from dusk until midnight, when the majority of those in the park are sex workers or their clients. 

As the light in the park fades, middle-aged men walk slowly past benches on which young men and boys sit, as though perusing shop windows. By now, a different demographic has arrived: unaccompanied minors, refugees who have been orphaned, are travelling alone or have been separated from their family during the journey, and see the park as a place to make money.

“The main issue is that they have no money, either for their daily lives or to pay for a smuggler,” explains Kenneth Hansen, the programme manager at Faros, an NGO that runs a shelter for unaccompanied minors close to the park.

“Some of them have told [us] that they have sex with men in order to do other things, to have money to go and buy a new phone,” he says.

“One boy told us he had sex with two men and got five euros [$5] so he could buy cigarettes … One guy told us he had sex with a man so he could pay to have sex with a woman.”

The clients are always Greek, explains Mahmoud. Most are in their 60s, but some can be as young as 30; others as old as 90. “You see men of all ages [buying sex],” he says. “Some are young men and some look like they might die the next day.”

Some of the sex workers are clearly on familiar terms with the clients, laughing and chatting openly with the ones they recognise. Others, often the younger ones, sit awkwardly, saying little. 

“Usually the men see me in the park, they come closer to me then ask me, ‘Where are you from?'” says Mahmoud. “I’ve learned a bit of Greek so I understand and we speak a bit. Then they sit down next to me and that’s how it starts.”

Once a price has been agreed, they move somewhere more private – but that usually just means going behind a bush a few metres away.

The clients

Costas is 46 and has good job at a logistics company. Most evenings after work, he goes home to his apartment in a suburb of Athens, where he lives alone. But three or four evenings a month he changes his clothes and drives to the park to look for sex.

His routine has been the same for 10 years, he explains.

“It’s easy to find sex here,” he says. “I normally stay for about an hour before I find someone to go with.”

He is familiar with two or three of the sex workers at the park whom he knows by name and sees regularly. Five euros is the going rate, he says, regardless of nationality.

Costas insists that he never has sex with refugees or anyone under the age of 18. That would be “wrong”, he says. But he does acknowledge that he can’t be sure about the age or nationality of those he does have sex with.

Only his closest friends know about his visits to the park, he says.

Yiorgos says he is 52 but he looks much older. He lives an hour away but comes to visit a friend who lives near the park three times a week. They go for coffee and, on his way home, Yiorgos walks through the park, looking for sex workers.

“[The sex workers] are 17, 18, 20, 30, 50, it depends,” he says. “The day before, there was one that was 16, small,” he adds, before looking around nervously. “They should be 18,” he admits. A sex worker in their 20s could have sex five times a night, earning up to 50 euros, he explains.

He doesn’t believe that what he does is wrong. “If I steal, it’s a problem. But I don’t steal. Neither do I fight …. If I fight or steal, yes, the police will come. But if not, they don’t come. What could they tell me? All they can do is ask me why I am sitting here. Is it wrong?” he says. 

Prices vary, explains Tassos Smetopoulos, a volunteer who organises a weekly food donation in the park. “In Pedion Areos, it starts from five euros [$5] and goes to 200 [$213],” he says. 

“Some of [the clients] say to the boys, ‘OK, you can come to my apartment, to have a little party. Some friends of mine will be there too. You can stay the night.’ Something like this can go up to 200 euros [$213]. It depends on what they’re asking and what the boys accept.”

In search of a better life

Shortly after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan, Mahmoud, who was then five, left his native Herat with his family. “My father went first before us and then the rest of our family followed him,” he says.

“Everybody in Afghanistan then who wanted to seek a good life usually went to Iran, so that’s what we chose to do.”

In Iran, his family lived on the margins, unable to find legal work once their temporary residence permit, which they couldn’t afford to renew, had expired. After five years of schooling, Mahmoud started working to support his family.

At 15, he left Iran ahead of his family to search for work opportunities in Turkey.

“I stayed for five years in Turkey working on a construction site, trying to earn some money and to organise my trip to Greece,” he says.

But so far, he hasn’t found the greater opportunities he had hoped for in Europe.

“If I find any way at all, I want to go to Germany because I know some people there. Maybe I could find a good job,” he says. “I would leave as soon as possible if I just found the road and some money to get there.

“I’ve tried many times to go [illegally] to Italy from Patra, hiding under a truck, but it never worked,” he adds.

He says he’s tried the official, legal routes for asylum in Greece, which would enable him to live and work legally in the country.

“I’ve tried to claim asylum but I can’t. It’s very hard. Many times I’ve been to [the asylum office] but I never get a meeting. They always say I have to wait.”

Using a mobile phone borrowed from a friend, Mahmoud speaks to his family in Iran at least twice a week. He gives them updates on his journey but never tells them the truth about his life in Athens.

“I tell them Athens is a good city, with nice people, but really, it’s like someone has injected this city with filth,” he says.

‘It is going on in front of our eyes and no one is doing anything’

Mahmoud says there are no pimps operating in the park and that it is only the asylum seekers’ desperate situation that forces them into sex work. But Hansen believes that not enough is being done to investigate whether anyone is behind it.

“Many [young refugees] are involved in sex for money,” he says. “But whether they do it for survival sex, or just to get an allowance, or if it is more organised, this we don’t entirely know and it’s an area the authorities don’t really want to touch.

“It’s taking place so obviously. You can just go to the park and solicit a 15-year-old … It is going on in front of our eyes and no one is really doing anything.”

In November, Greek police told CNN that “they had not had any reports of unaccompanied minors involved in the sex trade in [Pedion Areos or Victoria Square],” but said they were “aware of the problem and working to address it”.

The office of the Prosecutor for Juveniles, which is responsible for unaccompanied minors in Greece, told Al Jazeera that it had begun an investigation in December into the issue but that the investigation was ongoing. They declined to answer any further questions about it.

Mahmoud says that uniformed police officers sometimes patrol the park, but that evading them has been easy so far. “When the police come, if they come, we just go into the bushes and hide and they don’t know we are there.”

* The names of sex workers and clients have been changed to protect their identity

Source: Al Jazeera News