NORMANDY, Mo. – Students at a suburban St. Louis high school headed to the gymnasium for HIV
testing this week after an infected person told health officials as
many as 50 teenagers might have been exposed to the virus that causes AIDS. Officials refused to give details on who the person was or how the students at Normandy High School
might have been exposed, but the district is consulting with national
AIDS organizations as it tries to minimize the fallout and prevent the
infection — and misinformation — from spreading. "There's potential for stigma for all students regardless of whether they're positive or negative," Normandy School District spokesman Doug Hochstedler said Thursday. "The board wants to be sure all children are fully educated." A
teacher in a neighboring district singled out a girl who dates someone
at Normandy High and instructed her to get tested, Hochstedler said. A
competing school's football team initially balked at playing Normandy's
8-0 team. Jasmine Lane, a 16-year-old
sophomore, said her boyfriend from a neighboring high school broke up
with her on learning of the news — after she bought them tickets to
homecoming. "I cried so hard," she said. Hochstedler
said that as far as he knows, no other district has had to handle a
similar situation.
Students at the school of 1,300 are being tested
voluntarily, and the district is getting advice on the best ways to
support kids in crisis. Sophomore Tevin
Baldwin said that many of his classmates in this working-class city of
about 5,000 residents want to transfer out of the district, which
encompasses other towns. "Nobody knows what's going on," he said. The district declined to respond to his assertion. Marcus Holman, a 14-year-old freshman, said he never imagined HIV would become such a widespread threat at school. "I'm just trying to pass, get to the next grade, safely," he said. Normandy
Superintendent Stanton Lawrence agreed that students remain focused on
learning, despite concerns and distraction. There's no hysteria or
panic, and school is running routinely, he said. "They
recognize this situation is what it is, and doesn't mean school is
over," he said. "Their concern is heightened, but we have to face it
and do the responsible thing." The St. Louis County Health Department said last week that a positive HIV test raised concern that students at Normandy
might have been exposed. The department is not saying whether the
infected person was a student or connected with the school, only that
the person indicated as many as 50 students may have been exposed. The
Health Department also will not say how any exposure might have
occurred. Health Department spokesman Craig LeFebvre has said the
possibilities include sexual activity, intravenous drug use, piercings
and tattoos. Hochstedler said the district doesn't know the person's identity, or even whether he or she is a student. "We
do know there was some potential exposure between that person and
students," he said. "We don't know the individual or the route of
transmission." The district learned
Oct. 9 of the potential exposure and within a business day worked out
with the Health Department how to release the information and handle
testing, he said. "They took a very proactive stance," he said. "There's no precedent for this."Students are being tested at six stations in the high school
gymnasium, one class at a time. Only representatives from the Health
Department are with the students, who are offered educational materials
and a chance to ask questions before they are given an opportunity to
be tested with a mouth swab, Hochstedler said. They may decline.CONTINUE READING...