This isn’t just a headline. This is what’s happening right now — to your friends, your classmates, maybe even to you. And the scariest part? Most won’t even know they have it.
If you’ve followed my columns before, you know this isn’t new for me. I’ve written countless times about reproductive health, preventive care, and sex education. I talk about the things we were taught to stay quiet about. Because guess what? Staying quiet is killing us.
I started getting annual HIV tests and pap smears at 27. Not because I had symptoms. Not because I was “doing something wrong.” But because I refuse to be caught off guard by diseases that we now have the power to detect — early, affordably, and privately.
Let me say this louder for those in the back: Getting tested is not dirty. It’s not shameful. It’s not a confession. It’s a commitment to staying alive.
You can’t tell who has HIV by looking. You won’t know if you have HPV just by guessing. And these things don’t wait for you to feel ready. They just wait — until they can’t be ignored.
Palawan currently has the highest HIV testing rate in MIMAROPA. That’s something we should be proud of — and build on. Because the more of us who get tested, the more of us who stay alive.
Not fear. Not silence. Not the tired “just say no” script. Real, evidence-based, life-saving education. Because abstinence isn’t a plan — it’s a gamble if it’s the only thing we’re told.