DALLAS - There's music, texting, studying.
On the outside, 16-year-old Brianna Lamar is just like other teenagers.
On the inside, she is not.
"I have HIV," Brianna said. "I was born with it."
"For me to be as young as I am, and speak about it," she adds, "I realize that it does shock a lot of people."
What may be even more shocking, is Brianna isn't the only teenager in Dallas County infected with the virus that causes AIDS.
"The new numbers we're seeing in the 13-to-18 age group, that number is
staggering," said Dallas County Health Department Director Zach
Thompson.
Thompson said Dallas County leads the state in the number of new HIV infections.
Twenty-five percent of new HIV cases in the county are in the 13-to-24
age group. About 40 percent of all new cases are African American and
female.
"We were just as alarmed in the 80's when we saw the infection rate
among white gay males," Thompson said. "We should have the same
intensity now as it relates to African American females. And I don't see
that intensity."
Brianna says she talks openly with friends about her grueling daily
cocktail of HIV medication, and about safe sex. But she says no school
adult has ever talked to her about the latter.
"There's no sex ed," Brianna said. "They don't tell you what part should
go where, what can happen to this part if this happens - there's none
of that.
"There should be," she said emphatically.
Talking about safe sex and HIV is what's most important to Brianna and her grandmother, Freddie Easley.
"Because it's deadly," Easley said. "And because it's out there. And
because we need to teach little Johnnie that there's something he can
do, so he won't contract this disease."
Easley has raised her granddaughter since she was born with HIV. Brianna's mother and father both died of AIDS.
And while Freddie Easley is proud of her granddaughter, neither of them want anyone else to be like her.
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