More AIDS support needed on reserve, advocate says - Action News
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Thunder Bay

More AIDS support needed on reserve, advocate says

An advocate for First Nations people living with HIV wants more support for people diagnosed with the disease so they can stay in their home communities.

Getting treatment means leaving home for many First Nations residents

Lac Seul First Nation resident Rene Boucher now appears on posters and billboards as he attempts to get his message out that First Nations communities need HIV/AIDS support systems in place so people who have the disease don't have to leave their homes for treatment. (Jody Porter/CBC)

An advocate for First Nations people living with HIV wants to see morehelp for people diagnosed with the disease so they can stay in their home communities.

Lac Seul First Nation member Rene Boucher, who was diagnosed with HIV nearly 20 years ago, was the guest speaker at a Friday AIDS awareness breakfast in Thunder Bay.

Lac Seul resident Rene Boucher says more supports are needed for people living with HIV and AIDS on First Nations reserves. (Jody Porter/CBC)

"For me it was very scary because I didn't know what it meant, I had no clue what HIV was," he said.

"I'd seen things on billboards, I'd seen information, but I didn't think it impacted me. So when I was diagnosed, I was very afraid."

Now Boucher himself appears on billboards to spread the word about preventing HIV. But he said more needs to be done to help people with the disease living on reserve.

He said he recently received funding for a conference that will look atwhat supportsare needed to help First Nations people living with HIV stay at home in their communities, close to family and friends.

Currentlysome First Nations people with HIV are reluctant to disclose their diagnosis because they know it means leaving everything that they know to come to the city for treatment, he noted.

Bouchers own experience has taught him to be "hopeful."

"I was fortunate enough to be well enough to be able go on [antiretroviral drugs]," he said adding that its important "to take the time to remember someone who may have passed away from AIDS and to honour those who continue to do the hard work around care, treatment and prevention of HIV."