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September 16, 2016
By Sean Cahill
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The Museum of Modern Art recently hosted a special 25th anniversary screening
of the film “Madonna: Truth or Dare,” which documented Madge’s 1990
blockbuster Blond Ambition World Tour. The film was a sensation not just
because it peeked into the rarefied world of a global superstar — long
before social media and reality TV made such voyeurism humdrum — but
also for its portrayal of her dancers, a troupe of seven young men, six
of whom were gay. The gay dancers’ confident embrace of their sexuality,
their exquisite talent and charisma, and their physical beauty
captivated and empowered a generation of young gay men struggling with
self-acceptance in the midst of AIDS hysteria to come out and be proud.
Despite
its title, though, the film didn’t reveal the whole truth of the
dancers’ lives. Two of them, Salim “Slam” Gauwloos and Carlton Wilborn,
were hiding the fact that they were HIV positive. Both have since said
that they were too steeped in denial, shame and fear of stigma to share
their status at the time.
Gauwloos
was diagnosed with HIV in 1987, but paralyzed with shame, he did not
seek treatment until 10 years later, when he was hospitalized with
pneumocystis pneumonia. Now 47, he did not publicly reveal his status until the filming of “Strike A Pose”
a new documentary that catches up with six of the seven dancers to
examine their post-“Truth or Dare” lives (dancer Gabriel Trupin died of
AIDS in 1995).
Wilborn was diagnosed in 1985 but did not disclose his status until publication of his 2007 memoir. In a recent interview,
the 52-year-old said the difference between life circa “Truth or Dare”
and his life as portrayed in “Strike a Pose,” is “that I’m free now. …
the hiding and self-hatred — it’s not happening now, and I get to be in
these moments of goodness and be available for it.”
It’s
heartening to see these men back in the spotlight as long-term HIV
survivors helping others break through stigma and shame. Their stories
are particularly resonant as we mark National HIV/AIDS and Aging
Awareness Day on Sunday, September 18. Thanks to improvements in
treatment and care, half of those
living with HIV in the U.S. are, like Wilborn, age 50 or older.
That
people with HIV and AIDS are living longer is certainly heartening. But
as people with HIV age, they face unique and complex risks that health
care providers must become better prepared to address.
Older
adults who have been living with HIV for decades and taking
antiretroviral drugs often experience the early onset of other chronic
diseases. There “comorbid conditions,” as they are known, include liver
disease, heart disease and cancer. HIV medications and the virus itself
may also contribute to the early onset of cognitive impairment like
dementia and put older folks at higher risk for depression.
...as people with HIV age, they face unique and complex risks that health care providers must become better prepared to address.
In the brief, “Strategies to Improve the Health of Older Adults Living With HIV,”
The National Center for Innovation in HIV Care, a project of The Fenway
Institute, lays out steps that health care providers should take to
provide effective care for older people living with HIV.
Medical
and service providers should be trained in how to provide “culturally
competent care” — that is, care that takes into account the unique
issues facing older people living with HIV and is affirming and
nonjudgmental. Because half to two-thirds of people with HIV in the U.S.
are gay and bisexual men or transgender women, providers must be
trained to care for these populations as well.
Sexual
health education and HIV prevention for older adults is also critically
important. Many assume incorrectly that older individuals aren’t
sexually active, which contributes to lower rates of HIV testing and a
belief that they do not need sexual health education.
Gaulwoos
and Wilborn are a testament to the resilience and strength of long-term
survivors of HIV. But, as each has learned, they can’t survive on their
own. They, and hundreds of thousands of others like them in the U.S.,
need access to quality health care from providers who understand their
unique needs and health risks and networks of support to help them face
the challenges of living with HIV. Surely, that’s a truth we can all
live with.
Editor's note: Sean Cahill co-authored the "Strategies to Improve the Health of Older Adults Living With HIV" brief, referenced above.
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