ACLU Says New CDC HIV Testing Recommendations Raise Health and Civil Liberties Concerns (9/21/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
NEW YORK – The American Civil Liberties Union is concerned that the CDC’s new
HIV testing recommendations may harm the health of those newly diagnosed with
HIV and compromise the civil rights of anyone seeking medical
treatment.
“The CDC should be commended for trying to increase the number of people
tested for HIV, but eliminating the only safeguards that guarantee that testing
is voluntary and informed does little to ensure that people will receive the
care they need,” said Rose Saxe, a staff attorney with the ACLU AIDS
Project. “Studies have shown that patients who are tested without consent
are less likely to get the follow-up care that is critical to maintaining good
health.”
Under the previous guidelines, the CDC recommended that those being tested
for HIV give written consent to be tested and receive both pre- and post-test
counseling. The new recommendations eliminate both written consent and
counseling.
Doing away with written consent requirements could easily lead to people
being tested for HIV without their knowledge, particularly in urgent care
settings where health care providers may not have the time to have a meaningful
discussion with a patient about the consequences of HIV testing and what it
means to have HIV.
“Receiving an HIV diagnosis is a significant life-changing event. In
addition to having to learn to live with a life-threatening disease, people with
HIV deal with the continuing stigma that comes with having HIV,” added
Saxe. “Without pre- and post-test counseling requirements, we risk losing
a critical opportunity to educate people about HIV and how to prevent the spread
of it.”
The previous counseling recommendations sought to ensure that medical
providers educated patients about HIV and how it is transmitted. Because
certain vulnerable populations, such as HIV positive adolescents, are at even
greater risk of self-destructive behavior without adequate counseling, the new
recommendations could cause adverse results, jeopardizing the health of those
newly diagnosed and hampering prevention efforts.
According to the ACLU, the new regulations also raise serious privacy
concerns. Virtually every state in the nation now collects the names of
those who test positive for HIV. Many states also require doctors to
report private information, such as drug use and sexual history about those who
test positive.
“HIV discrimination is still rampant in this country. People continue
to lose their jobs and housing because they have HIV. If the government is
going to invade people’s privacy by collecting the names and deeply personal
information of people with HIV from their doctors, at a very minimum, people
deserve to know that this information is being collected and how it is going to
be used,” added Saxe. “Health care providers should also inform patients
if anonymous testing is available, so that people can make an educated decision
about where to get tested.”
In November 2003, the ACLU released a survey of HIV service providers finding
that HIV discrimination is still persistent throughout the United States.
A copy of the 2003 survey is available at: www.aclu.org/pdfs/hivaids/hiv_civilrights.pdf.
A copy of today's CDC recommendations on HIV testing is available at www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5514a1.htm.
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