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{UAH} WBK AND LA'KITGUM YOU HAVE MAIL

Gentlemen

 

I apologize for taking this long to follow up with this thread, I have been so caught up in Ebola and ISIS. We have a problem in Ontario schools that is very large and it is only sexually transmitted disease.  And I am again going back to the thread of Uganda girls did not use condoms. In using just one county in Ontario here of Essex, we have a huge problem tracking down students that have it and treating them. And the worst of all is Chlamydia because in many students it does not have a physical pain today, so you can walk with it till when it damages your body at an after time. The schools are testing them and parents are wondering why, but the county now has started to give a mug if you agree to be tested for Chlamydia. And why? Because girls and women have a problem having sex with men with condoms. It just do not work for them. We have got cases where women have dropped out of relationships for a man has demanded to use a condom. Friends we need to start to push the education to women and some men of using a condom and people get the end results. Uganda girls did not refuse to use condoms for they are uninformed or stupid but condoms simply do not do it for them.  I live in a province where you can get a condom from any place and for free. You get them from bars from restaurants from social workers from church basements, anywhere you walk and say I need a condom you will get it and for free. My God you want to go and wonk yourself good luck, the condoms are in a basket on your way out.

 

But girls simply do not want to sleep with men using a condom.

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel 

School defends offering STI tests

Parents have spoken of their shock at not being informed that their children were being offered the test

National News © by Press Association 2014

A school has defended offering pupils tests for sexually transmitted infections (STI) during lessons.

Blatchington Mill School in Hove, East Sussex, gives youngsters aged 15 or 16 the chance to do a chlamydia test as part of their personal, social, health and economic (PSHE) education.

Parents have spoken of their shock at not being informed that their children were being offered the test.

The mother of a year 11 girl told The Argus newspaper: "She refused to do it because she felt uncomfortable with it. I didn't know anything about it beforehand and I think the school should have let us know as parents that our children were going to be asked to do this.

"I know the tests were done by the students in the toilets, but I think it's humiliating to ask teenagers in class to do a test for an STI."

Ashley Harrold, deputy headteacher at Blatchington Mill, told the local newspaper that the tests were part of an NHS strategy that had been running for about four years and involved other schools.

The school said in a statement on its website that the lessons were aimed at giving youngsters informed choices about their sex lives, and normalising the STI test.

It also said that parents and carers have a right to withdraw their children from sex education classes.

The statement says: "As part of the session all learners are offered the opportunity (no one is made to do it) to do a chlamydia test during the lesson in an effort to normalise taking a chlamydia test.

"It is not anticipated that a great number of these will return a positive result, it is more an exercise to demonstrate how easy and painless doing one is and to reinforce in their minds how and where they can do the test should they need to in the future.

"Most young people do not become sexually active before the age of 16 and all sessions will be delivered within a framework of normative approaches, reminding young people that the legal age of consent for sexual activity in the UK is 16 and encouraging students to explore attitudes surrounding peer pressure, media influence and making positive decisions about relationships.

"Research shows that this type of provision does not encourage sexual activity.

"The purpose of this programme is to support young people to start making healthy choices around their health, understand what to expect from screening and help them to engage with local health services, in a supportive environment."

         

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in anarchy"
                    
Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni katika machafuko"

 

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