Youth Unite for Victory on AIDS (YUVA)
Such activities rely on the full involvement of youth volunteer networks in the country, youth-led and -oriented non-governmental organisations (NGOs), youth clubs and youth development centres. These organisations will be supported and strengthened to provide youth health- and HIV-related information and services through peer education, counseling, and behaviour change communication activities by integrating HIV education programming into their regularly scheduled and special activities. All active youth volunteers will be oriented to function as peer educators through a specially developed training curriculum.
Information and communication technologies (ICTs) also figure prominently in YUVA plans. For example, a series of entertaining quiz shows on AIDS, which will be shown on television and also made available in internet and print versions, has been created. The interactive youth-oriented YUVA website enables access to this quiz series (prizes are provided); it also provides information in the form of a publication page with free downloads, as well as a FAQs page that seeks to answer questions that young people frequently ask about reproductive health, sexuality, and HIV/AIDS. E-counseling is available here as well. In addition, organisers are working to set up Youth Friendly Information Centre/Services (YFIC) in youth development centres and universities which would provide youth-oriented counseling and life skills education in a confidential, enabling environment.
Rural youth who may not have ready access to this type of media or technology will be reached through youth clubs and youth development centres, institution-based programmes, and community-based organisation (CBOs) linkages. Organisers anticipate that parents, teachers, community leaders, panchayati raj institutions, and health care providers will be involved in this effort to ensure that young people know what to do to avoid infection and protect themselves from risky sexual situations - as well as to scale up and saturate youth-friendly health care services.
As part of the first leg of the campaign, a 2-day conference was held in Delhi to foster discussion of the implementation plan and strategy of YUVA. In the second phase, beginning in August 2006, the programme was launched at the state, district and panchayat levels.
MYA&S and NACO, with 7 national level youth organisations: Nehru Yuva Kendra Sangathan, National Service Scheme, Youth Red Cross, National Cadet Corps, Bharat Scouts & Guides, Youth Hostels Association of India, and Association of Indian Universities. The Rajiv Gandhi National Institute of Youth Development provides training and research support.
Content Update - HIV/AIDS on the Development Gateway - July 6 2006; the Development Gateway website; and YUVA website.
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