Several young persons participated in the latest peer educator training session executed by the Caribbean Vulnerable Communities (CVC). The recent training session which occurred in the parish of St. Thomas in Jamaica, over three days, focused on topics about sexual reproductive health and rights. Areas covered included stigma and discrimination, positive masculinity, human rights, human sexuality, sexual reproductive system, basic facts on HIV/STI, and communication. The session is part of the Strengthening Access, Inclusion and Leadership for Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SAIL-SRHR) project being implemented by CVC. The project is seeking to improve access to inclusive health services; peer-led SRHR education; school-based health curriculum and teaching; and research and advocacy skills.
The participants welcomed the opportunity to learn more about sexual reproductive health and rights. “The training was really interesting and very useful. Most of the things I did not know, so it taught me a lot. I would definitely recommend this training to my peers because several things weren’t clear to me before but now they,” said Kareen Murray. Another participant, Mark Anthony Salmon agreed, saying “It was very informative. It taught me a lot of stuff, stuff that I did not even know about gender and diseases. The training has equipped me with relevant knowledge to share. I can now sit down with family members, peers, friends and even strangers and talk to them about these things. Trainings like these are very important because a lot of us as young people go out in the world and don’t even know what we are doing. We just jump into things and at the end of the day you realise you made a mistake and you can’t change that. But if you had the information from early you could have avoided it.”
Meanwhile Mark Anthony believes that more emphasis should be placed on teaching sexual and reproductive health and rights in high schools. “Definitely these training sessions should be a part of the high school curriculum because right now a lot of young people need to be educated on the reasons why they should or should not do certain stuff. They may just hear somebody saying something and think that it sounds cool and then just jump into it without knowing the risks they are taking,” he noted. The SAIL-SRHR project is aiming to reach thousands of young people in the parishes of St. Catherine, Clarendon, St. Thomas, Kingston and St. Andrew, Manchester and St. Elizabeth
In the meantime, CVC’s Technical Programme Officer with oversight for the SAIL-SRHR project Andrea Campbell says the peer educator sessions being undertaken with adolescents in the southern and southeastern health regions in Jamaica are crucial to increasing access to inclusive health services for young people. “We’re training these young people to be peer educators who are armed with the necessary information to guide their peers to make informed decisions. The topics explored over the three days were chosen to give them the information necessary to navigate the health systems in their respective parishes. We also sought to empower them with correct information to put them in a position to dispel myths and misconceptions when they’re talking about sexual and reproductive health and human rights issues with their peers,” she said.
The SAIL-SRHR (Strengthening Access, Inclusion and Leadership for Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights) project is funded by Global Affairs Canada through Alinea International. It is being implemented in Jamaica by CVC and the Jamaica Family Planning Association.