Robbie and her daughter
have no problem showing affection …
“The love, the hugging, the kissing,” says Mrs. Thompson.
“It’s very important to me, it gets me through my
day,” says 17-year-old Brittni, “She’s a very
strong woman, and just having her affection it just brings up my
day and it helps me get through, you know, the tough times.”
There’s nothing unusual about affection between mother
and child …
The difference here is that Robbie is HIV positive.
“There’s still a lot of questions around. Well if
I touch you will I get it. If I drink behind you can I get it,
or if you hug me, you may give it to me,” says Mrs. Thompson.
In fact, according to a UCLA survey of 344 HIV positive parents
…
almost 40-percent said they avoid hugging and kissing their children
…
for fear they could transmit the disease.
“I think people are just so nervous about or unclear about
… do the professional even know,” says says Donna Wilson-Fant,
a supervisor for HIV case management.
But, she says, years of research shows … there is no danger
of transmitting hiv through hugs, kisses, holding hands.
The real danger, she says, is not hugging your child.
“Because when you withhold this type of affection, children
begin to show signs of depression,” says Wilson-Fant.
And Brittni says there’s a big difference between her mom
just saying she loves her… and showing her
…
“Just seems to make me happier when she hugs me or kisses
me. Cause I know that she really does love me, and that helps a
lot,” she says.
And for other parents like her, living with HIV, Robbie’s
advice?
“They need to embrace their child… they need to
show their child that they love them. No matter what, you know.”
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