The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times - October 03, 1994
Lee Romney; Times Staff Writer
The women, Latinas of all ages, picked up condoms displayed on a folding table, and some asked shyly how they are used. All of them listened intently while group leader Connie Rodriguez explained to them in Spanish how to examine their breasts for early signs of cancer. And some nodded quietly when she described relationships plagued by poor communication.
The platica, or talk, was one of four open-air sessions last week in the Jeffrey-Lynne area of Anaheim to educate women about HIV and other health issues. Sponsored by the Delhi Community Center in Santa Ana, the program also encourages women to speak openly with their children and husbands on such topics.
"We realize that to address HIV and AIDS in a vacuum without addressing the issues of power and sex negotiation will not work," said Irene Martinez, executive director of the Delhi center. "How do you bring up the issue when in your culture, in your community, you never talk about sex and sexuality?"
Rodriguez, a 50-year-old homemaker who lives in the Jeffrey-Lynne neighborhood, organized the evening meetings. "Some husbands don't let their wives go out to the community centers," she said. "What I'm trying to do is go to their own back yard."
Rodriguez is one of 17 female volunteers who graduated two weeks ago from a Delhi Community Center program that aims to reach 1,000 Latinas across Orange County in the next year. The program, funded by a grant from the State Office of AIDS, is one of only a few to target the Latino community, local health officials said.
Getting the word out is vital. Of the 3,388 AIDS cases reported in Orange County through June this year, 207 of the patients were women. Of those, 58 were Latina, according to the Orange County Health Care Agency.
Those numbers reflect an alarming increase over the years. In 1989, for example, 13% of Orange County women afflicted with AIDS were Latina. That compares to more than 28% of the cases reported so far this year.
"We definitely need to continue programs for the Latino population in general," said Ron Taylor, STD/HIV Services program manager for the Orange County Health Care Agency. "Men and women show the increase."
The Delhi program, he said, may be the only one working specifically with Latinas.
Talks cover how a person contracts the virus that causes AIDS, how to prevent it and how to broach the subject with a partner, including how to say no to unsafe sex. They also offer information about mammograms, which detect breast cancer, and Pap smears, which can discover cervical cancer.
"I learned a lot of things about sexual relations that I didn't know," said Yolanda Mendez, 28, one of the platica participants. "Before this class, I didn't know anything. I thought you could get AIDS by eating from the same spoon or from a kiss. But now I see that it's not so. Now I can go and tell my friends what I learned."
Some of the hourlong sessions also touch on another sensitive issue: domestic violence.
"Sometimes, the woman feels she has to have sex because, if she doesn't, her husband might hit her or become very angry," said Leticia Leon, a Delhi Community Center activist who coordinates the program. She spoke to the neighborhood group at its final session last week.
"Many men are accustomed to hit their wives in front of strangers to show that he's macho, that he's in control," she told them. "I don't know if any of you have experiences with these situations I have described, but they are very common."
Rodriguez, who organized the talks equipped with little more than a borrowed table, a binder full of Spanish-language medical pamphlets and the condoms used in her demonstrations, said any piece of information passed along might benefit another woman.
Rodriguez admits that she knew little about AIDS or the other subjects she now teaches until she attended a women's rap session held by activist Leon last year. What she heard that day so moved her, she said, that she joined 16 other women who signed up for training and made the commitment to carry the message into their respective neighborhoods.
The educadoras range in age from 22 to 55 and include women from Mexico, Peru, Guatemala, El Salvador and Brazil, Leon said.
Rodriguez was the first to launch her programs, Leon said. Other women plan to hold workshops soon in elementary schools in Santa Ana and Garden Grove, at a Santa Ana medical clinic, and in as many Latino neighborhoods as they can reach.
At Thursday's final Jeffrey-Lynne meeting, Leon handed out certificates and bonus eyeliner to the women, who lingered to share tacos and sodas while they chatted about what they had learned. Some said their husbands hadn't been enthusiastic about the program.
Participant Mendez, for example, said her husband wanted her to sit with him while he ate his dinner each night. But after she agreed to prepare his food early and explained to him that the information might be important for the health of both of them, he relented.
"It's a very delicate subject," Mendez said.
The intimate setting of Rodriguez' sessions provide the only frank advice some of the women have ever received about sexually transmitted diseases.
The program "helps us ask for information, for counseling," said Margarita Mendez, 52, who is pregnant with twins and also has 13 grandchildren. "Now we know what to be careful of, how to guard against infection.
"Many times we don't know where to go for advice," said Mendez, a native of Mexico. "We come from a country far away, and we are alone. We don't know where to turn." Without Rodriguez, she said, "we wouldn't have learned any of this."
GRAPHIC: PHOTO: (A2) A Lesson for Latinas: Delhi Community Center in Santa Ana is taking AIDS education and discussions of domestic violence where lower-income Latina women live. Above, Leticia Leon, right, presents poster celebrating women's causes to Connie Rodriguez, a teacher in program. PHOTO: COLOR, Leticia Leon, left, presents a poster celebrating women's issues to Connie Rodriguez, teacher in Delhi program on AIDS. PHOTO: COLOR, Ofelia Leon listens as coordinator Leon, left, talks to Margarita Mendez. "Now we know what to be careful of, how to guard against infection," Mendez says. PHOTO: Latinas, some of them with children in tow, gather in an Anaheim apartment courtyard to hear a presentation on AIDS and domestic violence. PHOTOGRAPHER: DON BARTLETTI / Los Angeles Times
Copyright © 1994 - Los Angeles Times. All rights reserved. Reproduced with permission. Reproduction of this article (other than one copy for personal reference) must be cleared through the Los Angeles Times, Permissions, Times Mirror Square, Los Angeles, CA 90053. http://www.latimes.com.
AEGiS is a 501(c)3, not-for-profit, tax-exempt, educational corporation. AEGiS is made possible through unrestricted funding from Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, Elton John AIDS Foundation, the National Library of Medicine, Pacific Life Foundation and donations from users like you.
Always watch for outdated information. This article first appeared in 1994. This material is designed to support, not replace, the relationship that exists between you and your doctor.
AEGiS presents published material, reprinted with permission and neither endorses nor opposes any material. All information contained on this website, including information relating to health conditions, products, and treatments, is for informational purposes only. It is often presented in summary or aggregate form. It is not meant to be a substitute for the advice provided by your own physician or other medical professionals. Always discuss treatment options with a doctor who specializes in treating HIV.
Copyright ©1980, 1994. AEGiS. All materials appearing on AEGiS are protected by copyright as a collective work or compilation under U.S. copyright and other laws and are the property of AEGiS, or the party credited as the provider of the content. .