More than 200 gay men received a free check-up in a hospital in
northern Beijing on Sunday.
The examination was organized by the Chaoyang Chinese AIDS
Volunteer Group, a non-government organization in Beijing.
Information about the free medical examinations was posted on a
website for gays, www.hivolunt.net, a week ago, according to Xiao
Dong, chief of the volunteer group.
The check-up mainly targeted sexually transmitted diseases and
AIDS. To ensure privacy, examinees were each given a card with
numbers and passwords so that they could easily retrieve their
results on the website.
Psychological consultants were in attendance at the examination
site.
Most people were in their 30s, with a sprinkling of older people
and college students.
Xiao did not identify the hospital but said it was a private
hospital. "We wanted to carry out the examinations in public
hospitals, but they turned us down saying they were too busy," he
said.
According to Xiao, the Chaoyang Center for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) that co-organized the exam will also distribute
50,000 "rainbow cards" in places like gay pubs. The cards entitle
the holder to four boxes of condoms each month.
In 2004, China put the total of gay men in the country at
between five and ten million.
The HIV infection rate is close to 1.5 percent among sexually
active homosexual men, said Zhang Beichuan, a professor with
Qingdao University's Medical School.
(Xinhua News Agency April 17, 2007)