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Living with HIV/Aids: Hong Kong quilt exhibit instils sense of connection among survivors, and helps battle stigma

  • Ahead of World Aids Day, an HIV-positive social worker stresses the disease is not a death sentence; daily medicine stops transmission
  • Despite advances, HIV/Aids is one of the most misunderstood and stigmatised conditions – globally and in the city – Hong Kong doctor says

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HIV is not a death sentence, and medicine stops transmission, says an HIV-positive social worker, but the stigma remains. An exhibition of four Aids quilts highlights Hong Kong’s 40-year fight. Photo: Kylie Knott

In 2017, Colby, then aged 18, was diagnosed with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), an infection that attacks the body’s immune system.

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“I was feeling nauseous, had a fever and was exhausted all the time,” says Colby, who was born in the Chinese province of Fujian, but moved to Hong Kong with his family when he was aged two.

“I didn’t attribute these symptoms to HIV because I was under a lot of stress because of some childhood trauma and also from the transition from high school to university,” he says.

Having just started a new relationship, Colby wanted to make sure he was healthy.

“I really liked my new boyfriend and wanted things to be good and healthy, so to protect our relationship I was like, ‘OK, let’s go for a check up.’”

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A rapid antibody test showed he was HIV positive. His then 21-year-old partner tested negative.

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