Angela Spears

Health Examiner
For the past 10 years, I’ve worked with foundations and nonprofits on creating equal opportunities for underserved communities on issues of health and social justice, with an eye toward grassroots solutions. I'll be your eyes and ears for getting involved.

  

Diabetes Awareness Month

National Examiners

Jay McDonough
Progressive Politics Examiner
Most Recent Post
Ford submits their recovery plan
Bruce Hosking
Boomer Biker Examiner
Most Recent Post
Sennheiser MKE 400 Shotgun Microphone
 
 

(i.e. Los Angeles hiking, Los Angeles parenting)

Helping people with STDs contact partners by e-card

December 1, 12:30 PM
by Angela Spears, Health Examiner
 

December 1 is World AIDS Day

Today marks the 20th anniversary of World AIDS Day and one new tool to help slow this epidemic is an Internet-based service called inSPOT. The service allows users to send anonymous e-mail notification to get tested for a sexually transmitted disease (STD). The free "e-cards" are notices from a previous sex partner with an STD stating that the recipient may have contracted the disease. The site was also designed as a way for people newly diagnosed with an STD to notify their partners to be tested.

The e-cards are direct and to the point and advise recipients to get checked out. Recipients can follow links to learn more about STDs, possible treatments, find clinics in their cities where they can be tested and help prevent the spread of the disease to others. 

 inSPOT started in San Francisco and was mainly to serve the gay community, however it has broadened its reach to include heterosexuals and has expanded to cities across North America. The nonprofit organization works to develop innovative sexual health resources through technology to provide awareness, education and prevention programs that improve people’s lives.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) currently estimates that approximately one in five persons living with HIV in the United States is unaware of his or her infection and may be unknowingly transmitting the virus to others.

Data reported in the journal PLoS Medicine shows the STD e-mail alerts are a success. More than 750 people visit the inSPOT site daily. Since 2004, the service has sent more than 49,500 e-cards. According to Mary McFarlane, a behavioral scientist with the Division of STD Prevention at the CDC, "The Internet is a good place to generate risk behavior, and if we want to do public health, and stop the spread of diseases, we need to be where those risk behaviors are, and introduce health into this venue."

These types of sites are most helpful when they include both accurate, accessible information and a community where users can interact and obtain personal support from both peers and professionals. Sending an e-card telling someone to get tested for STDs is fast becoming a public health courtesy.


Topics: Health Care , AIDS , HIV , CDC , Health News , STDs , e-cards
   Subscribe   Feed
 

Comments

Name:  
Email Address:  
Comments:  

More from Health Examiner

Do you need help with autism?

November 28, 7:10 PM
If you’re a parent whose child has autism spectrum disorder (ASD), a medical practitioner or someone with autism, there is a new on-line service available to connect families and individuals touched by ASD. The Autism Support Network provides support... Read More
Topics: Health Care , Children , CDC , Autism

Health news coverage in the U.S. media

November 25, 7:17 PM
This report was released by The Kaiser Family Foundation and The Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism. The purpose of this study is to take a broad look at how the news media covered one vital area — health and health... Read More
Topics: Health Care , Health News

First Down syndrome education and research center to open in the US

November 19, 4:20 PM
In the United States a new nonprofit organization established to create new opportunities for young people with Down syndrome; Down Syndrome Education USA has plans for the first Down Syndrome Education and Research Center based in the US. The new center,... Read More
Topics: Health Care , Children , Mental Health , Down syndrome

Give green this holiday season

November 17, 3:02 PM
This holiday season you can have an effect on millions of people by being green-minded in your gift giving. The world is facing an economic crisis that is forcing food and fuel prices to soar, and climate changes have caused devastation in some of the... Read More
Topics: Health Care , Children , Global poverty , Eco Gifts , Green gifts

November is American Diabetes Month

November 11, 5:40 PM
November is American Diabetes Month and the American Diabetes Foundation has launched a $1 Million dollar campaign entitled “Kiss Diabetes Goodbye” to help fund research and support diabetes education programs in communities across the country.... Read More
Topics: Health Care , Diabetes , American Diabetes Foundation

Protect yourself against the stomach flu

November 8, 5:38 PM
Viral gastroenteritis, the highly contagious stomach virus which usually occurs in late fall and winter, is again circulating throughout many major U.S. cities according to the Department of Health. Gastroenteritis means inflammation of the stomach... Read More
Topics: Health Care , Children , CDC , Stomach Flu

Manage your heart health on-line

November 4, 4:26 PM
The American Heart Association has a free on-line resource – Heart360 – which helps you manage your heart health. This innovative new cardiovascular wellness center allows users to enter such vital statistics as blood pressure, cholesterol... Read More
Topics: Health Care , Heart Failure , HealthVault , American Heart Association , Cardiovas

Attention: Dealing with AD/HD

October 30, 11:18 PM
Parenting is never easy, but can be even more challenging with a child with special needs such as Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD). Dealing with AD/HD will most likely be a lifelong journey for you and your child. Keeping up-to-date on... Read More
Topics: Health Care , Children , Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder , CHADD

Decline in RNs may impact baby boomers

October 25, 7:00 PM
According to a study by the Journal of the American Medical Association, the United States will experience a 20 percent shortage of nurses in its health care system by the year 2020. Entitled "Implications of an Aging Registered Nurse Workforce,"... Read More
Topics: Health Care , Nurses , RNs

More from this examiner