π
2024-07-23 Β |Β β±οΈ 18:10 Β |Β ποΈ 90.1K views Β |Β π 6.3K likes Β |Β π¬ 1.7K comments
Pea interviews Belle, a healthcare worker who handles HIV patients, about the state of HIV/AIDS in the Philippines. The conversation covers why Filipinos avoid testing, the cultural resistance to condoms, the terrifying reports of intentional needle-pricking in Cebu nightclubs, and why the true scope of the epidemic is almost certainly worse than the official numbers suggest.
HIV is the fastest-increasing disease in the Philippines β
- Belle confirms HIV is currently the disease increasing the most in the country
- People are generally aware HIV exists but actively avoid learning more about it β fear of the information itself keeps them ignorant
- HIV is taught in schools, so it's part of the education system β the problem isn't lack of education, it's willful avoidance
- Pea is baffled: everyone has cell phones and can research anything, yet people choose not to
The stigma is the core barrier β
- Once someone is known to have HIV, people treat them as an outcast β afraid to go near them or even talk to them
- This stigma is why people don't get tested: they'd rather not know than face the social consequences
- Belle's most recent patient was diagnosed extremely late β already had multiple severe diseases that had progressed because of the compromised immune system
- The case could have been avoided entirely with early testing
Filipino culture of avoiding medical care in general β
- The avoidance isn't unique to HIV β Filipinos broadly don't go to the hospital unless symptoms are severe
- Common approach: self-medicate with herbs or paracetamol, ignore symptoms, only seek help when it's too late
- HIV follows the same pattern: people disregard fever, headaches, and other early symptoms, assuming it's just a common cold, until the infection progresses to AIDS
Why Filipinos resist using condoms β
- Poverty is a factor: even though barangays (local government units) distribute free condoms through the private sector, people neglect them
- Going to a store to buy condoms requires effort and money that some people don't have
- The "sensation" argument: many people claim it feels better without one
- Cultural unfamiliarity: condoms aren't widely normalized in Filipino culture β even among locals dating each other, condom use is uncommon
- When a Filipina dates a foreigner, she brings that cultural norm with her β Pea's subscribers have reported that their Filipina partners actively refuse condoms
- Pea speculates some women may want to get pregnant (specifically wanting half-breed babies), but Belle emphasizes it's more broadly a cultural norm of not being accustomed to condoms at all
- Pea's direct advice: even if the Filipina says no, protect yourself β especially if neither party has been recently tested
Government programs exist but go unused β
- The Philippine government provides free condoms and contraceptive pills through public health channels
- The problem isn't access β it's that people don't want to use them
- Pea references a previous street interview she did where women didn't know anything about contraception or birth control, which shocked her
Early signs and symptoms of HIV β
- First 1-2 months after contact: on-and-off fever, headaches, vomiting β the body is adjusting to the virus
- Night sweats (often dismissed as nothing)
- As the infection settles: high-grade fever that won't respond to any medication, diarrhea, visible skin rashes
- Unexplained weight loss is a key indicator β if you're losing weight for no reason, get tested
Testing is expensive and inaccessible for many β
- HIV testing costs 6,000-10,000 pesos
- For poor Filipinos who can barely afford food, spending that amount "just to know" they're sick is an impossible ask β they'll prioritize feeding their family
- Recommended testing frequency: once a year if practicing safe sex, every 6 months if you have multiple partners
- Testing resources and facilities are limited, especially outside major cities
Treatment exists but there's no cure β
- Public hospitals offer free antiretroviral medication (Belle mentions LLTE) to HIV-positive patients
- The medication doesn't eliminate the virus β it helps avoid severe complications and extends life by preventing the immune system from becoming further compromised
- Getting treatment requires meeting multiple requirements, which adds another barrier
- Early detection is the key to managing the disease and living longer
The deliberate infection problem β intentional needle-pricking β
- Belle confirms reports of HIV-positive individuals deliberately pricking strangers with contaminated needles in clubs and public spaces
- Cebu specifically has seen a spike in HIV cases
- Belle's explanation for why: some HIV-positive people want to "feel like they belong" and spread the disease so they're not alone β a "if I'm going down, let's all go down" mentality
- Reports of needle-pricking incidents on jeepneys and specifically in the Colon area of Cebu β Belle says these were covered by TV stations
- The pricks can be so subtle you might not even feel them
- This is illegal, but enforcement is difficult
- Pea and Belle temper the alarm: this is likely a small number of disturbed individuals, not a widespread coordinated effort β but it's real and documented
The true numbers are unknown β
- Because testing rates are so low, there are no accurate figures for how many Filipinos are HIV-positive
- The actual scope of the problem is almost certainly much worse than official estimates
- "We just have the estimate at the moment globally" β the real picture is hidden behind the cultural refusal to test
Pea's framing for foreign viewers β
- She's clear this isn't meant to scare foreigners away from the Philippines β she wants people to call it their second home
- But if you're entering a relationship with a Filipino or Filipina, HIV testing is a conversation you absolutely must have
- She positions it as essential knowledge: "know the facts" about what you're walking into
- She acknowledges the Philippines is a developing country and says people who get offended by that label need to face reality β "for us to progress we have to acknowledge the problem"