Issue 90.3

Page 28

CONNECT :

A Free HIV Self-Testing Project Words by Jenny Jung SAMESH, short for South Australia Mobilisation + Empowerment for Sexual Health, is a partnership program between SHINE SA and Thorne Habour Health. It aims to bridge the concerning gap that exists in SA’s sexual health services, in education, training and advocacy for multi-cultural, gender diverse experiences. HIV has never been more preventable and treatable, and SAMESH is dedicated to delivering these tools so that HIV becomes a thing of the past in SA. Their CONNECT project may be the most innovative cure to the inaccessibility of HIV testing yet. SAMESH is piloting several vending machines across SA that provides free Atomo HIV Self-Test kits and thus eliminating various barriers to getting tested. Its target groups include gay men and other men who have sex with men, migrants, and international students. Their project has been consulted with a cultural advisory group to ensure that it is culturally sensitive, and even the instructions are available in eight different languages. Dr Nikki Sullivan, is the project coordinator of the CONNECT program on SAMESH’s end, where in partnership with other service providers and support services, she drives the project. Before coming to SAMESH, Nikki was an academic at the Macquarie University in cultural studies for 25 years, with an expertise in queer culture, and LGBTQI history and practices. She left the university sector to return to Adelaide and work for the history trust of SA. She was first the curator of the Migration Museum, then a manager at the Centre of Democracy. Across all her roles, her main focus - her life focus - has always been inclusivity, and advocating for marginalised groups. She began working with SAMESH as a volunteer when she was offered the role of project coordinator. I met up with Nikki to discuss the CONNECT project and gain some insight into the culture around HIV testing.

While the culture has shifted to being more sex-positive and encouraging of STI testing, HIV testing is often overlooked, feared, or brushed off as irrelevant. How do you think this approach came to be, and how relevant do you think HIV testing is for the young people here at university? I think that from the beginning of the epidemic, really, there’s been this association of HIV with particular groups of people. So initially, back in the 80s, they used to talk about the 4 H’s: Homosexuals, Haemophiliacs, Heroin users, and Haitians. So basically, it was racist. - It was like ‘these are the 4 groups of people who are most likely to get HIV and they’re all people we don’t care about’. I think what has stuck from those years is the association of HIV with gay men and with intravenous drug 28

users. So I think people who don’t identify as gay men or don’t use intravenous drugs, think; ‘It’s not something I’m going to get’. But actually that’s not the case at all. If you look at the different situations in African countries you’ll see they are very different to the situation in Australia, where historically it has been that gay men have been much more likely to become positive than heterosexual people. What we now see in some


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Articles inside

The Federal Election: How Will it Play Out in SA?

5min
pages 54-55

Overtone

2min
page 50

Chelsea Watago - No Room at the Inn & Another Day in the Colony

6min
pages 57-60

First Impressions of Radelaide

2min
page 56

Beyond the Clouds

3min
pages 51-53

Why Should We Care About the Ukraine-Russia War?

5min
pages 48-49

‘Nice Guys Aren’t Nice’ - Follow-up

5min
pages 46-47

Film Review - The Lost Daughter

6min
pages 44-45

Gig Review - Everyday Apathy

7min
pages 36-38

Gender and Name Changes Need to be Accessible

4min
pages 42-43

Learning About the Far-Right With Help From the Far-Left

5min
pages 39-41

In Defence of Medea

2min
pages 32-33

Sonnet of Eve & Untold

1min
pages 34-35

CONNECT - Rapid HIV Testing Program

11min
pages 28-31

Over in a Flash: the SA State Election at a Glance

3min
pages 26-27

Club Spotlight

1min
pages 24-25

Vox? Pop

2min
pages 12-13

Econ-Dit

4min
pages 20-21

Sustainabili-Dit

4min
pages 18-19

Editorial

2min
page 7

SRC President’s Report

2min
pages 10-11

Left Right Centre

6min
pages 16-17

Systematic Review

5min
pages 22-23

State of the Union

2min
pages 8-9
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