Blair Thomas R
Am J Public Health. 2017 Jun;107(6):872-879. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2017.303704. Epub 2017 Apr 20.
In the 1970s, groups of gay and gay-allied health professionals began to formulate guidelines for safer sexual activity, several years before HIV/AIDS. Through such organizations as the National Coalition of Gay Sexually Transmitted Disease Services, Bay Area Physicians for Human Rights, and the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, these practitioners developed materials that would define sexual health education for the next four decades, as well as such concepts as "bodily fluids" and the "safe sex hanky." To do so, they used their dual membership in the community and the health professions. Although the dichotomy between the gay community and the medical establishment helped define the early history of HIV/AIDS, the creative work of these socially "amphibious" activists played an equally important part. Amid current debates over preexposure prophylaxis against HIV and Zika virus transmission, lessons for sexual health include the importance of messaging, the difficulty of behavioral change, and the vitality of community-driven strategies to mitigate risk.
20世纪70年代,一群同性恋及支持同性恋权益的健康专业人士开始制定更安全性行为指南,这比艾滋病毒/艾滋病的出现早了几年。通过诸如全国同性恋性传播疾病服务联盟、湾区人权医生组织和“无尽放纵姐妹会”等组织,这些从业者编写了相关材料,这些材料在接下来的四十年里定义了性健康教育,以及“体液”和“安全性行为手帕”等概念。为此,他们利用了自己在社区和健康专业领域的双重身份。尽管同性恋群体和医疗机构之间的二分法在艾滋病毒/艾滋病的早期历史中起到了一定的定义作用,但这些具有社会“两栖性”的活动家的创造性工作同样重要。在当前关于艾滋病毒暴露前预防和寨卡病毒传播的辩论中,性健康方面的经验教训包括信息传递的重要性、行为改变的困难以及社区驱动的降低风险策略的活力。