Avin Tan

Avin Tan is Singapore’s only living HIV patient who has publicly declared his condition and the second person, after Paddy Chew, to come out publicly as HIV-positive in Singapore.

=HIV diagnosis=

Tan was diagnosed with HIV in 2009. Like many people living with HIV in Singapore, he is in the prime of his working age. Despite his efforts to encourage others to come out about their positive HIV/AIDS status, none have been willing to follow suit.

=Advocacy=

Tan works full-time with Action for AIDS and is an advocate for the rights of persons living with HIV. Tan's focus is on the fight against workplace discrimination and termination at work due to one's HIV-positive status.

=Coming out=

Tan was conducting training for volunteers on how to use the test kits in 2009 when he found out he had HIV. He wondered how he was going to tell his parents about his HIV status. It would take four years before he got his answer.

In 2011, he was a volunteer on "48", a Royston Tan documentary. He had to source for subjects – people living with HIV – to be interviewed. Not one person was willing unless they could remain anonymous. It dawned on him that if he couldn't do it, how could he convince someone else?

A year later, they were looking for people to speak at the 8th AIDS Singapore Conference about living with HIV. No one from Singapore would come forward. He had had enough. He agreed to speak at the Conference.

He had discussed HIV with his family previously through his work, so the reaction was not as bad as he had expected. The hardest part was telling his mother. He started by leaving my bottles of medicine around in the hope that she would ask him...and she did. But every time, he lied about it. He thinks he probably freaked out. He was not ready to tell her. This went on for 6 months and she asked him about it four or five times.

Finally, he knew he had to just say it: "Mom - you know those medicine bottles in my room? It's true. They are mine. I am living with HIV." His mother immediately asked how was he coping, why he did not tell her earlier, did he need help paying for his medication, how his health was and whether he was okay.

Then she started crying. She was obviously upset. But she was not worried he was contagious or would infect the family. She was only worried for his health. Tan felt a great relief after telling her. After that he felt comfortable telling more people.

In retrospect, Tan felt that all the delays with his mother were a good thing. It gave him time to educate her about HIV here and there so that she would know it was not a death sentence. She developed quite a good understanding of HIV by the time he told her. Tan feels that when coming out to someone, it is as much a journey for him, as is it for them. So it is important to slowly ease them in and increase their knowledge about the topic - especially for something as sensitive as a HIV diagnosis.

A year later, Tan's mother made her first appearance with him at a public event when he was speaking on stage.

=8th Singapore AIDS Conference=

Tan shared his experience being diagnosed HIV-positive at the 8th Singapore AIDS Conference in 2012. The delegates gave him a standing ovation at the end of his speech. The following is a video of his speech shot by Roy Ngerng:



=AM Live! interview=

On Friday, 30 Nov 2012, AM Live! interviewed Tan together with a non-Singaporean HIV activist, Laurindo Garcia who had both recently come out about their HIV-positive status during the 8th Singapore AIDS Conference held earlier that year.



=The People of Singapore=

On 20 April 2014, Tan was featured in The People of Singapore's Facebook page.

=Channel News Asia interview=

On Wednesday, 16 July 2014, Channel News Asia broadcast a news clip on the HIV pandemic in Indonesia during their "Primetime Asia" bulletin at 7:30pm which featured an interview with Tan in which he revealed how he discovered he was infected with the HIV.



=9th Singapore AIDS Conference=

Tan attended the 9th Singapore AIDS Conference held in conjunction with World AIDS Day on Saturday, 29 November 2014. During the conference Tan, who is a manager at Action for AIDS said, "A lot of the stigma and discrimination stems from misinformation or this irrational fear of how HIV could even spread through central air-con systems or sharing food with someone. So these are the misconceptions that cause unnecessary fears. People need to feel that its safe to talk about it.”,,

=See also=


 * Paddy Chew
 * Epidemiology of HIV/AIDS in Singapore

=References=

=Acknowlegdements=

This article was written by Roy Tan.