I reviewed the slides for this week’s assignment and found something very intriguing. I believe it was about those who receive blood, 1 in 150,000 will receive an infected unit (Douglass, slide 7). I had to read that a few times to believe it. In this country, you have a 1 out of 150,000 chance that you could receive an infected portion of blood. The odds seem terribly likely. When I think of how much blood people are pumped with from car accidents or surgeries every day from all over the country, it scares me that our supply is not cleaner. With the amount of science we have at our fingertips, I would think our blood supply would be nearly perfect. I thought they would have better odds than this.
I found a story online that tied in with our question of the week, and my “did you know” column about students.
The article followed a seven year old student whom attended an elementary school in Yugoslavia. This boy was HIV positive. The article followed his social environment and how he was shunned from not only other children, but more specifically, other children’s parents.
I tried to write responses to a few students QOTW postings, but this excerpt clearly says it better than I could.

“Besides the efforts of the school faculty as well as the representatives of the Ministry of Education and health institutions, it was not possible to prevent the exclusion of the HIV student forced by the parents of his peers. Even with good basic knowledge of HIV/AIDS among the parents, irrational fear prevailed. This case implies that beside the fact that the general public is well informed of HIV/AIDS and of the willingness of the public and government institutions to help individual cases, unsatisfied awareness of this problem is the important determinant of the behavior of social groups” (Gateway, 2000)*
* http://gateway.nlm.nih.gov/MeetingAbstracts/ma?f=102238531.html
Douglass, Sharon. (2009). HIV: A Human Concern. HSC 3593, University of Central Florida, Orlando.
