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JAMA HIV/AIDS Information Center thical Opinions on HIV/AIDS Issues http://www.ama-assn.org/special/hiv/policy/testing.htm JAMA HIV/AIDS Information Center HIV/AIDS The Journal of the American Medical Association Policy References Additional HIV Testing and Reporting Resources By Ronald Bayer, PhD Professor, School of Public Health Columbia University New York, NY (Posted March 1996) Overview From the outset, the test developed to detect antibody to HIV mired in controversy. Uncertainty about the significance of the test's findings and about its quality and accuracy provided the technical substrate of disputes that inevitably took on a political and ethical character, since issues of privacy, communal health, social and economic discrimination, coercion, and liberty were always involved. The availability of the test, first used on a broad scale in blood banking, quickly raised a host of key questions. For example, how would the test be used outside of the testing context? Would groups at increased risk for AIDS be encouraged to take the test? How forceful would such encouragement be? How would those who agreed to be tested be counseled about the test's significance for themselves and others? Would and could the results be kept confidential? Would voluntary testing be a prelude to compulsory screening? What would be the consequence of testing for the right to work? To go to school? To obtain insurance? To bear children? To remain free? Each of these questions would force a confrontation over the fundamental matter of the relationship between the defense of privacy and the protection of the public health, over the roles of voluntarism and coercion in the social response to the threat of AIDS. The issue of medical confidentiality is so important in the HIV testing and reporting context because it has been widely recognized as a central element in the effective response to AIDS. Not only does the principle rest upon ethical norms of autonomy and respect for privacy, but it has been viewed as crucial to encouraging those most at risk to come forward for HIV testing and for clinical attention. But as important as the principle of confidentiality is, it has its limits. When competing social concerns are of sufficient magnitude, physicians and ethicists have acknowledged that exceptions may be made. The definition of when the concerns reach the standard of sufficient magnitude, however, has always been a matter of grave dispute. Early in the century, for example, private practitioners found themselves in conflict with public officials who believed that the public health required that the names of those with tuberculosis and venereal disease be reported to confidential registries for purposes of epidemiological surveillance, contact investigation and 1 of 4 11/1/98 5:41 PM JAMA HIV/AIDS Information Center thical Opinions on HIV/AIDS Issues http://www.ama-assn.org/special/hiv/policy/testing.htm clinical follow-up. These debates resurfaced in the context of the AIDS epidemic. Interestingly, in the epidemic's early years, when state health departments moved to require the reporting of the names of those with AIDS, there was little protest because of a near universal recognition that an understanding of the new disease required complete surveillance data. Where there as been protracted bitter controversy and ethical dispute has been over the question of whether the logic of AIDS reporting requires that the names of those with asymptomatic HIV be reported as well. The debate has been largely framed by the question of whether such reporting would have the counterproductive consequence of discouraging HIV testing or whether it would enhance the public health goals of surveillance and contact tracing. During the past decade, the debate over HIV testing has evolved, driven by changing social concerns and fears about casual transmission, conceptions of the role of the test in fostering behavioral change, and advances in therapeutics that have altered the justification for identification of those with asymptomatic infection. In the first years after the HIV test was developed, ethical analyses tended to underscore the need to protect the privacy interests of those who were tested while encouraging voluntary testing. (2) The major exception to the principle of voluntariness that was embedded in the prevailing ethical framework was blinded or anonymous testing for purposes of epidemiological surveillance. (4) Debate also emerged over the role of testing in both health and life insurance. (5) Proponents of testing would argue that it merely represented an extension of sound underwriting principles; opponents would characterize such screening as the basis for invidious discrimination. Conflict also has occurred over the question of screening travelers, immigrants, and refugees. (6) Proponents of such screening have depicted it as a rational approach to preventing the "transmission" of new infections across borders; those who have resisted such efforts have claimed that in the case of travelers, HIV screening would present a logistical nightmare with profound human rights implications. In the case of immigrants and refugees, opponents of screening have emphasized the importance of treating HIV no differently than other chronic conditions. The most heated controversy has centered on the question of newborn testing and testing during pregnancy. In these cases, the debate has centered on the question of whether the child's interest in identification for purposes of therapeutic intervention or for purposes of prophylaxis against infection can override the claims of maternal privacy. (7,8) This debate, like others, underscores in an important way the central ethical concern about privacy and voluntarism in the decade-long controversy over HIV testing. Back to top References 1. Levine C, Bayer R. The ethics of screening for early intervention in HIV disease. Am J Public Health. 1989;79:1661-1667. 2 of 4 11/1/98 5:41 PM JAMA HIV/AIDS Information Center thical Opinions on HIV/AIDS Issues http://www.ama-assn.org/special/hiv/policy/testing.htm 2. Field MA. Testing for AIDS: uses and abuses. Am J Law Med. 1990;16:33-106. 3. Bayer R, Lumey LH, Wan L. The American, British and Dutch responses to unlinked anonymous HIV seroprevalence studies: an international comparison. AIDS (UK). 1990. Reprinted in Law Med Health Care. 1991;19:3-4. 4. Isaacman SH, Miller LA. Neonatal HIV seroprevalence studies: a critique of national and international practices. J Legal Med. 1993,14:413-461. 5. Stone D. The rhetoric of insurance law: the debate over AIDS testing. Law Social Inquiry. 1990;15:2. 6. Gostin LO, Cleary PD, Mayer KH, Brandt AM, Chittendon EH. Screening immigrants and international travelers for the human immunodeficiency virus. N Engl J Med. 1990;332:1743-1746. 7. Bayer R. Women's rights, babies' interests: ethics, politics, and science in the debate of newborn screening, In: Minkoff H, DeHovitz J, Duerr A, eds. HIV Infection in Women. New York, NY: Raven Press; 1995:293-307. 8. Working Group on HIV Testing of Pregnant Women and Newborns. HIV infection, pregnant women, and newborns: a policy proposal for information and testing. JAMA. 1990;264:2416-2420. Back to top Additional Resources Blood Bayer R. Gays and the sigma of 'bad blood.' Hastings Cent Rep. 1983;13:2, 5-7. Murray T. The poisoned gift: AIDS and blood. Milbank Q. 1990;68(suppl 2):205-225. General Bayer R, Levine C, Wolf SM. HIV antibody screening: an ethical framework for evaluating proposed programs. JAMA. 1986,256:1768-1774. Reporting Fox D. From TB to AIDS: value conflicts in reporting disease. Hastings Cent Rep. 1986;16(suppl):11-16. Francis DP, Singleton JA. Reporting of HIV-1 infection through the provision of essential services. J Acquir Immun Defic Syndr. 1993;6:285-286. Screening and Employment Gostin LO. The AIDS Litigation Project: a national review of government and human rights commission decisions, II: discrimination. JAMA. 1990;263:2086-2093. Back to top 3 of 4 11/1/98 5:41 PM JAMA HIV/AIDS Information Center - thical Opinions on HIV/AIDS Issues http://www.ama-assn.org/special/hiv/policy/testing.html JAMA Newsline Library Treatment Center Prevention HIV/AIDS Policy Education & Support Center Best of the Net Search Feedback AMA Home Page This site produced by the Journal of the American Medical Association with support from Glaxo Wellcome Inc. © 1997 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. 4 of 4 11/1/98 5:41 PM HealthGate - Document http://www.healthgate.com/cgi-bin/..ilf=G&d=fmb96em=8652318xui=98239571 click here Return to the HealthGate Home Page. Send comments to:[email protected] Copyright ©1996 HealthGate Data Corp., All rights reserved. 2 of 2 10/26/98 11:26 AM HealthGate - Document http://www.healthgate.com/cgi-bin/.=160767&ui=98703272;AlDS/98702272 Country of Publication UNITED STATES click here and njHealthGat Return to the HealthGate Home Page. Send comments to:[email protected] Copyright ©1996 HealthGate Data Corp., All rights reserved. 2 of 2 10/26/98 11:19 AM HealthGate - Document http://www.healthgate.com/cgi-bin/..ilf=G&d=tmb96&m=741610&ui=98097216 click here If you're going to be Return to the HealthGate Home Page. Send comments to:[email protected] Copyright ©1996 HealthGate Data Corp., All rights reserved. 2 of 2 10/26/98 11:22 AM Caution in Implementing HIV Surveillance System Resolution http://www.glma.org/pnamesreporting.html Caution in Implamenting HIV Surveillance System GLMA Public Policy Resolution: 110-97 Approved: October 25, 1997 WHEREAS, treatment of HIV/AIDS has vastly improved in the past several years, which has resulted in declines in AIDS diagnosis and death; and WHEREAS, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) AIDS Surveillance system, especially for reporting trends in infection, is no longer adequate; and WHEREAS, the CDC is preparing to advise states that HIV case reporting must be implemented and that named HIV surveillance is reasonable; and WHEREAS, research shows reluctance by some to be tested for the antibodies to HIV if the names those who test positive are to be reported to the state; and WHEREAS, discrimination and bias against those who are HIV infected still occurs, and once privacy is breached it can not be restored; and WHEREAS, named HIV reporting would result in greater risk of exposure to breaches in privacy for HIV infected individuals who could remain on a "list" years longer than those currently being reported with an AIDS diagnosis; and WHEREAS, state assurances to protect the confidentiality of individuals in a named HIV reporting system cannot be guaranteed (and in the past has not been) as policy and procedures regarding maintenance of such a list could change over time; and WHEREAS, individuals who participate in high-risk behaviors should be encouraged to get tested and get into treatment if HIV-infected, not frightened away from testing and treatment because of fear of the loss of confidentiality; and WHEREAS, a named HIV case report surveillance system will still not adequately represent the epidemic as it will provide information only on those choosing to be tested, therefore be it RESOLVED: That the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association strongly opposes named HIV reporting as it is detrimental to testing and treatment efforts, would be contrary to public health surveillance and prevention, and is not needed for tracking the epidemic; and be it further RESOLVED: That GLMA encourages the CDC to further study and improve unique identifier systems and other solutions, such as encryption, for the complete protection of confidential medical data before it continues any more efforts to promote a surveillance system involving named reporting of HIV; and be it further RESOLVED: That GLMA supports improved HIV surveillance so that the epidemic can be more accurately tracked and resources devoted to prevention and services can be most effectively targeted; and be it further RESOLVED: That GLMA encourages the CDC to expand the use of anonymous population-based seroprevelance studies to more accurately track the epidemic; and be it further RESOLVED: That GLMA believes that anonymous testing is an essential component of the public health response to the HIV epidemic and must be fully funded and enhanced in every state, and be it 1 of 2 10/25/98 5:14 PM Caution in Implementing HIV Surveillance System Resolution http://www.glma.org/pnamesreporting.html further RESOLVED: That GLMA strenuously rejects any plan to link surveillance with any other public health effort of disease control, such as partner notification. For futher information contact: Peter Sawires, Public Policy Associate: [email protected] 2 of 2 10/25/98 5:14 PM Importance of Accurate HIV surreillance Systems HIV affects AIDS kills It is important to have an accurate understand ing of extent B scope of epidemic in order to allocate limited resorices, The Advocate Community les Favors Non-Name Based Sumeillance Systems. ATDS The advocate community has come out strongly in favor of non-hame based survillance systems (Name groups There is concern that mandatory name reporting -0 discovrage treatment $ testing 2 Rccords for Longer period of time. The use of Privacy Protection D costes or other non names Deased latter data, privacy protections. Damas Names Based Systems Provide greater Privacy Protections Privacy concerns are huge - once briached, can't be undone HealthGate - Document http://www.healthgate.com/cgi-bin/.=160767&ui=98703272; AIDS/98703272 click here on HealthGate HealthGate Document Record 1 from database: AIDSLINE Order full text for this document Title CDC says names, not numbers, do better job in tracking HIV. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Author Anonymous Address Source AIDS Policy Law, 1998 Jan 23, 13:1, 6-7 Abstract The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released the results of a three-year evaluation of the unique identifier systems used in Maryland and Texas to track HIV cases. The report indicates that the unique identifier systems fall short of the more widely-used name reporting systems. Currently all States track AIDS cases by name and 30 States also list HIV cases by name; only Maryland and Texas use the numerical alternative. CDC's report indicates the main problem lies in getting health care providers to include the Social Security number in reports to health departments. More than one-fifth of the unique identifiers were missing the Social Security number, severely limiting the success of the surveillance system. The CDC added that findings from surveys of public attitude toward name-based surveillance indicate that the use of names is not a major deterrent to HIV testing for high-risk individuals. The American Civil Liberties Union reported that the unique identifier system was a viable alternative in Maryland, noting that the coded data were 76 percent complete during the second half of 1996, a rate that surpasses some States with higher rates of HIV. Language of Publication English Unique Identifier 98703272; AIDS/98703272 Order full text for this document MeSH Heading (Major) Disease Notification *MT; HIV Infections|*EP; Population Surveillance|*MT MeSH Heading Adult; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.); Confidentiality; Contact Tracing|MT; Human; Maryland; Names; Registries; United States|EP Publication Type NEWSLETTER ARTICLE ISSN 0887-1493 1 of 2 10/26/98 11:19 AM http://130.14.32.44/cgi-bin/VERSION_A/IGM-client?27910+detail43 National Library of Medicine: IGM Full Record Screen i Order Log off Documents IGM Next Details Return Return to Previous Record Of Search to Results Search Screen Record TITLE: The University of Minnesota Youth and AIDS Projects' Adolescent Early Intervention Program: a model to link HIV-seropositive youth with care. AUTHOR: Remafedi G AUTHOR AFFILIATION: Department of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA. SOURCE: J Adolesc Health. 1998 Aug;23(2 Suppl):115-21. SECONDARY SOURCE ID: MED/98376077 ABSTRACT: The survival of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive adolescents may be abbreviated by delays in health care delivery. Methods of linking youth with services have not been well studied. With support from the Special Projects of National Significance Program, the Youth and Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) Projects' (YAP) Adolescent Early Intervention Program offers early intervention health care services to all affected youth in Minnesota, a state with mandatory reporting of HIV/AIDS cases. The conceptual framework is a novel application of traditional public health disease surveillance strategies to link HIV-positive adolescents with health care services. The target population is composed of all 13-22-year-old HIV-positive persons reported to the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH). MDH staff locate and contact HIV-positive youth, conduct structured interviews regarding health status and needs, and facilitate enrollment at YAP. Sixteen male and 20 female participants (mean age 21 years; 56% people of color; 32% gay or bisexual) reported serious health risks, including inconsistent condom use (83%), poverty (78%), high school dropout (56%), unemployment (50%), illegal conduct (50%), medical debt (42%), unstable living situations (33%), running away (33%), substance abuse (33%) and attempted suicide (28%). More than one third reported each of six HIV-related symptoms. Seventy-five percent of participants sought advocacy/case coordination; 56%, clinical trials of experimental therapies; and 50%, vocational training and access to entitlement/eligibility programs. Linking HIV-positive youth to care is a valuable extension of the work of disease intervention specialists in states with similar reporting systems. MAIN MESH HEADINGS: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/*PREVENTION & CONTROL Adolescent Health Services/*ORGANIZATION & ADMIN *Models, Organizational 1 of 2 10/25/98 5:39 PM http://130.14.32.44/cgi-bin/VERSION_A/IGM-elient?27910+detail-H3 National Health Programs/*ORGANIZATION & ADMIN ADDITIONAL MESH Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/THERAPY HEADINGS: Adolescence Adult Case Management/STANDARDS Female Health Education/METHODS Human HIV Infections/PREVENTION & CONTROL HIV Infections/THERAPY Intervention Studies Male Minnesota Program Evaluation Risk Factors Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S. PUBLICATION TYPES: JOURNAL ARTICLE LANGUAGE: Eng Order ( Log off Documents IGM Next Details Return Return to Previous Record of Search to Results Search Screen Record 2 of 2 10/25/98 5:39 PM http://130.14.32.44/cgi-bin/VERSION_A/IGM-client?27910+detail+9 National Library of Medicine: IGM Full Record Screen Order i Log off Documents IGM Next Details Return Return to Previous Record of Search to Results Search Screen Record TITLE: Protection of HIV/AIDS surveillance data in the United States. AUTHOR: Metler R; Gostin LO; Posid JM; Gnesda DS; Sullivan PS; Riedford DG; Lazzarini Z AUTHOR AFFILIATION: CDC, Atlanta, GA, USA. SOURCE: Int Conf AIDS. 1998;12:973 (abstract no. 44185). SECONDARY SOURCE ID: ICA12/98406917 ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Protection of HIV/AIDS information and surveillance data, to prevent disclosure and discrimination, is a human rights concern and essential to the conduct of surveillance. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) assessed current security practices at surveillance units (SU) and reviewed state and federal confidentiality laws to see if protections were adequate. METHODS: A 124-question survey of security practices was administered at 33 of 61 SUs. A survey of state epidemiologists and legal database search were used to assess state laws. To assess federal protections, a review of federal statutes, regulations, constitutional law, case law, legal journals, agency recommendations, and legislative committee reports was undertaken. RESULTS: Of 33 SUs surveyed, all had disciplinary policies for improper disclosure of data, 89% closed off the work area containing surveillance data with identifiers to outsiders, and 82% prohibited cleaning crews from entering surveillance units unescorted. All states had legal protection for HIV/AIDS data, but their content varied widely. For example, exceptions to confidentiality laws allowed disclosures to: health providers (83%), needle-sharing or sex partners (71%), subpoena or court order (56%), blood banks (42%), correctional institutions (27%), school officials (23%), and insurance companies (15%). At the federal level, protection consists of removal of names before encrypted HIV/AIDS data are transmitted to CDC and of a collection of statutory and constitutional safeguards. CONCLUSIONS: In summary, protection must be assured at all 3 levels: SU, state, and federal. While all SUs have security policies, CDC is further strengthening protections by using survey findings to implement minimum security standards. To address state law variability, CDC is developing model state legislation on public health information privacy, with emphasis on HIV data. Federal legislation providing uniform protection of individual health information, including HIV data, is being considered. MAIN MESH HEADINGS: *Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Confidentiality/*LEGISLATION & JURISPRUD *HIV Infections 1 of 2 10/25/98 5:40 PM http://130.14.32.44/cgi-bin/VERSION_A/IGM-client?27910+detail-9 *HIV Infections *Population Surveillance ADDITIONAL MESH Human HEADINGS: Privacy United States PUBLICATION TYPES: ABSTRACT LANGUAGE: Eng Order t Log off Documents IGM Next Details Return Return to Previous Record of Search to Results Search Screen Record 2 of 2 10/25/98 5:40 PM http://130.14.32.44/cgi-bin/VERSION_A/IGM-client?27910+detail+8 National Library of Medicine: IGM Full Record Screen i Order Log off Documents IGM Next Details Return Return to Previous Record of Search to Results Search Screen Record TITLE: Assessment of the impact of a major HIV/AIDS confidentiality breach, Florida. AUTHOR: Liberti T; Conti LA; Lieb S; Dulin S; Maddox L; Crockett LK AUTHOR AFFILIATION: Florida Department of Health, Tallahassee 32399-0700, USA. SOURCE: Int Conf AIDS. 1998;12:928 (abstract no. 43421). SECONDARY SOURCE ID: ICA12/98405049 ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: In September 1996, a computer diskette containing the names and demographic information of numerous HIV-positive patients was anonymously mailed to a local health department and 2 major newspapers serving the 5-county Tampa Bay area of Florida. The newspapers publicized the receipt of the unauthorized information, but did not further disclose the identities of the patients. Investigations of the incident were launched by the Florida Department of Health (DOH) and the Florida Department of Law Enforcement. METHODS: Law enforcement officials gathered evidence about the incident. The DOH conducted a study to assess the impact of the breach on the AIDS surveillance system and HIV counseling and testing programs. RESULTS: A DOH employee and a non-employee were implicated in the confidentiality breach. The volume of AIDS case reports declined temporarily in the county where the employee worked due to his being placed on administrative leave and the time consumed by the criminal and internal DOH investigations. There was no evidence to suggest that local provider confidence in the AIDS reporting system was adversely affected by the breach. When active AIDS surveillance resumed in early 1997, case reporting in the area returned to normal levels, and missed cases were collected retrospectively. Elsewhere in the state, no effect on case reporting was evident. Statewide, as well as in the 5-county Tampa Bay area, overall HIV counseling and testing patterns for October-December 1996 were similar to those for the same period in 1995. In the county where the employee worked, a slight decline in HIV testing was observed in the immediate post-breach period, which was followed by a return to the pre-breach level. Implementation of legislatively mandated HIV infection reporting-initially scheduled for January 1997--was postponed by 6 months. CONCLUSIONS: The breach had minimal impact on the AIDS surveillance system and HIV counseling and testing programs statewide. The employee resigned, and he and the non-employee were convicted of criminal charges. No class action or individual lawsuit was filed by patients. Following the breach, DOH 1 of 2 10/25/98 5:43 PM http://130.14.32.44/cgi-bin/VERSION_A/IGM-client?27910+detail8 security and confidentiality measures were enhanced statewide, and such measures became a model for other states' HIV/AIDS surveillance systems. HIV infection reporting was successfully implemented in July 1997. MAIN MESH HEADINGS: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/*DIAGNOSIS *Confidentiality *Confidentiality/LEGISLATION & JURISPRUD HIV Infections/*DIAGNOSIS *Truth Disclosure ADDITIONAL MESH Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/EPIDEMIOLOGY HEADINGS: Counseling Crime Disease Notification/LEGISLATION & JURISPRUD Florida Human HIV Infections/EPIDEMIOLOGY Population Surveillance PUBLICATION TYPES: ABSTRACT LANGUAGE: Eng i Order Log off Documents " IGM Next Details Return Return to Previous Record of Search to Results Search Screen Record 2 of 2 10/25/98 5:43 PM http://130.14.32.44/cgi-bin/VERSION_A/IGM-client?27910+detail+2 National Library of Medicine: IGM Full Record Screen i Order Log off Documents IGM Next Details Return Return to Previous Record of Search to Results Search Screen Record TITLE: Facing reality [letter] AUTHOR: Gault MH SOURCE: CMAJ. 1998 Sep 8;159(5):443, 445. SECONDARY SOURCE ID: MED/98429715 MAIN MESH HEADINGS: HIV Infections/*PREVENTION & CONTROL *Medical Missions, Official *Occupational Health *Voluntary Workers ADDITIONAL MESH HEADINGS: Female Human HIV Infections/EPIDEMIOLOGY HIV Infections/TRANSMISSION Lesotho/EPIDEMIOLOGY Male Population Surveillance World Health Organization PUBLICATION TYPES: LETTER JOURNAL ARTICLE LANGUAGE: Eng Order i Log off Documents " IGM Next Details Return Return to Previous Record of Search to Results Search Screen Record look for MD / MA /TX studies / articles 1 of 1 10/25/98 5:38 PM Study: Anonymous HIV Testing Is Key http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/a/AP-AIDS-Tests.html Breaking News The New York Times THE WEB FROM A.P. Home Site Index Site Search Forums Archives Marketplace Sherlock makes searching the Internet SO easy October 27, 1998 Study: Anonymous HIV Testing Is Key A.P. INDEXES: TOP STORIES I NEWS I SPORTS I BUSINESS I TECHNOLOGY | ENTERTAINMENT Filed at 7:54 p.m. EST By The Associated Press CHICAGO (AP) Anonymous screening for the AIDS virus leads to people getting tested and treated much earlier, a study found. But where name-linked testing is required as it is now in 11 states public clinics have seen no significant decline in the number of people tested, another study found. In confidential testing, the person's name is linked to test results in a medical chart and kept on file at health departments to prevent cases from being tracked more than once. The names are stripped before results are sent to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In anonymous testing, only a number is recorded with the test result, never a name. Federal authorities favor the availability of both. They say name reporting is the only way to track the epidemic, but anonymous testing may help curb it by getting people into treatment earlier. `The history of this disease has been a little different than other diseases, because we haven't had a therapy until recently that was highly effective," said Dr. Allyn K. Nakashima, lead author of one study and a CDC medical epidemiologist. Public reluctance to give names to public health officials for testing has eased, since a person's anonymity disappears when he or she becomes a patient, she said. The CDC studied about 459,000 tests at health departments in six states before and after they implemented reporting of names of people who tested positive for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Name reporting did not appear to diminish the use of testing in the states studied Louisiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey and Tennessee -- the CDC said in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association. Name reporting has been required since 1981 in all states for full-blown AIDS and has been routine even longer in all states for other diseases ranging from 1 of 2 10/27/98 8:04 PM States That Track HIV Cases by Name http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/a/AP-AIDS-Tests-List.htm Breaking News The New York Times ON THE WEB FROM A.P. Home Site Index Site Search Forums Archives Marketplace Get a new Mac for $99 October 27, 1998 States That Track HIV Cases by Name A.P. INDEXES: TOP STORIES I NEWS I SPORTS I BUSINESS I TECHNOLOGY I ENTERTAINMENT Filed at 7:53 p.m. EST By The Associated Press These 11 states require reporting by name of anyone who tests positive for HIV to local health departments for confidential case tracking. All other states offer anonymity as an option in HIV testing. Alabama Idaho Iowa Mississippi Nevada North Carolina North Dakota South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Wyoming 1 of 2 10/27/98 8:03 PM GMHC News Release http://www.gmhc.org/press/980326a.html GMHCNews Release FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 26, 1998 Contact: Stephen Soba: (212) 367-1214/Pager: (917) 556-6797 Greg Lugliani, (212) 367-1210/Pager: (917) 556-6356 GMHC Welcomes State HIV Workgroup's Call for Monitoring and Firm Rejection of Mandatory Partner Notification and Names Reporting A Unique Identifier System is Clearly Recommended Ronald Johnson, Managing Director for Public Policy, Communications and Community Relations at Gay Men's Health Crisis, released the following statement: GMHC welcomes the New York State AIDS Advisory Council HIV Surveillance Workgroup's long-awaited report on tracking the epidemic. The report clearly states the compelling need for collecting HIV data as the best weapon to stop the future spread of HIV. New York urgently needs a new system to monitor the AIDS epidemic, and GMHC hopes this report will provide the needed impetus to legislation that makes this system a reality. In light of an ill-considered bill currently in Albany sponsored by Assemblywoman Nettie Mayersohn (D-Queens) and Senator Guy Velella (R-Bronx), perhaps the report's most significant recommendation is its unequivocal rejection of coercive, mandatory government-run partner notification programs. The report instead recognizes the importance of partner notification remaining voluntary and within the context of clinical care. The report also wisely comes out for the continuation of anonymous testing in New York State and the safeguarding of confidentiality for those who test positive. Given the real fears many HIV-positive people have of being named and reported to the government, we are truly heartened that the HIV Surveillance Workgroup overwhelmingly rejected a names-based system. Gay Men's Health Crisis is opposed to any names-based HIV surveillance system. Shockingly, workgroup members from the New York City Department of Health caved to political pressure and changed their votes to support criminal penalties for HIV-positive people who do not disclose their status to sexual or needle- sharing partners, even if they are engaging in safer sex. Despite the City's flip-flop, this measure was defeated. Lawmakers who seek a quick fix to the worst public health crisis the state has ever faced and who would contemplate punishments for people with HIV should heed the report's overarching message that simple solutions in the fight against AIDS don't save lives. Policies that promote, not discourage, HIV testing are the only way to go. Press Room Facts & Statistics I A History of GMHC & AIDS I GMHC at a Glance GMHC 1 of 1 10/23/98 6:13 PM GMHC News Release http://www.gmhc.org/press/980113.html GMHC News Release FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE January 13, 1998 Contact: Stephen Soba, (212) 367-1214 Gay Men's Health Crisis Calls for Monitoring of HIV Infections Demands New York State Develop System that Collects and Uses Data to Expand Treatment and Prevent New Infections, While Protecting Privacy Gay Men's Health Crisis called today for a new system for tracking HIV infection in New York State. Until now, GMHC had opposed plans to report HIV infections. But with changes in the epidemic, the agency now believes that the old hospital-based AIDS reporting system is obsolete. A new monitoring system is critical to help prevent new infections, especially among young people, as well as to expand health care for those already infected with HIV. The numbers of AIDS cases and deaths have been available for years, but the huge number of those infected with HIV - and of new infections each year - remains a mystery. "Shifts in HIV infections and new early treatment options demand new approaches," said Ronald S. Johnson, GMHC's Managing Director for Public Policy, Communications and Community Relations. "Counting only those who are hospitalized reveals yesterday's epidemic, not today's. We are committed to fighting for a new system of tracking HIV infections with strong privacy protections that will help those most at risk: the poor, women, youth, especially gay youth, and young adults." New York's current monitoring system, designed in 1983, tracks the epidemic by counting people who become hospitalized with, or die from, AIDS-related illnesses. The system misses the shift of HIV care from hospitals to outpatient clinics and doctors' offices. It also misses the large numbers of people who have learned they are HIV positive but have remained healthy. GMHC is calling for a monitoring system with strong and enforceable privacy protections to prevent discrimination against people who are HIV positive. Personal information gathered by the state public health department needs to be protected as stringently as the current AIDS monitoring system has guarded privacy for nearly two decades. Public health data in New York State are among the most highly protected form of medical information. GMHC believes that the real threat to privacy is the unregulated free market for private medical records among insurers, drug companies, industry and employers. GMHC also favors the preservation of free, publicly-funded anonymous testing. Anonymous testing is an important vehicle for some people to receive counseling and testing, enter medical care, and prevent further transmission. Anonymous testing is an important adjunct to any HIV monitoring system, because lack of this option leads some people to delay testing, donate blood as a means to be tested anonymously, and give false information at confidential testing sites. "Our call for a new monitoring system should not become a vehicle for enacting punitive, ineffective or unrelated HIV policies," said Mr. Johnson. "Some propose linking a new monitoring system to the issue of partner notification. We are opposed to mandatory, l of 2 10/23/98 6:14 PM GMHC News Release http://www.gmhc.org/press/980113.htm government-run partner notification. We are convinced that counseling about voluntary disclosure and protecting sexual partners must continue to be performed by doctors, nurses, social workers and community-based organizations. The real challenge for New York State public health officials and elected leaders is to use the data collected from a new HIV monitoring system to increase care for the infected and to prevent new infections from occurring." Press Room I Facts & Statistics | A History of GMHC & AIDS | GMHC at a Glance GMHC 2 of 2 10/23/98 6:14 PM GMHC News Release http://www.gmhc.org/press/980326.html GMHCNews Release FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 26, 1998 Contact: Stephen Soba, (212) 367-1214 GMHC Strongly Opposes Coercive Partner Notification Bill Bill Would Deter HIV Testing, Endanger People with HIV and Their Partners The following statement was released by Ronald S. Johnson, Managing Director for Public Policy, Communications and Community Relations at Gay Men's Health Crisis: Gay Men's Health Crisis firmly rejects legislation mandating government- directed contact tracing, a misguided, ineffective and perilous approach to a complex question. Mandatory partner notification is not the answer. It would accomplish nothing, except to heighten the threat of domestic violence and lead people at risk for HIV to avoid early testing and medical treatment, driving the infected and their partners into a state of increased ignorance and even greater danger. The Mayersohn/Velella bill (A.6629/S.4422) demands that physicians report the names of HIV-positive persons to local health departments, which would in turn notify spouses and/or known sexual partners. In an election year, politicians may conveniently forget that existing state law already authorizes partner notification, regardless of the consent of people with HIV, whenever physicians believe there is risk of infection to an unsuspecting partner. Communities most vulnerable to infection -- gay men, intravenous drug users, adolescents, women of color -- will not be tested if they believe government is collecting names of HIV positive people and hunting down their partners. Rather than compelling people to resist getting tested, as this bill will do, New York should commit itself to aggressively promoting HIV testing. That's the best way of stemming the spread of HIV. If this bill passes, spouses and partners, particularly women, will fall prey to domestic violence, which is far more likely to occur as a result of government-driven HIV disclosure. To argue that HIV is the same as other STDs is deceptive; unlike syphilis and gonorrhea, HIV is an incurable life-long infection. Furthermore, the Mayersohn/Velella bill would create an outrageously costly bureaucratic structure - the cost could be as high as $5,600 for every single contact - wasting precious funds that could be spent more effectively to promote testing and prevention. We share the legitimate concerns reflected in the Mayersohn/Velella bill. However, stopping the spread of HIV will require more than a simplistic response. Partner notification will only succeed when an individual and a health care provider work together to identify and notify a partner. Press Room Facts & Statistics I A History of GMHC & AIDS I GMHC at a Glance 1 of 1 10/23/98 6:15 PM Take AIM News & Information: In the News http://www.takeaim.org/newsinfo.htm NEWS & INFORMATION i What's new? Find out about the latest theories, discoveries, and treatments for HIV and AIDS. In the News 12th World AIDS Converence or Two of AIM's finest were in Geneva, Switzerland for try this mirror site , or this one the conference on AIDS. Dr. David Ostrow offered a poster on Hepatis and HIV risk among drug-using men who have sex with men, and the impact of new combination HIV therapies on knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors among Chicago gay men. Dr. David McKirnan offered a poster on HIV sexual risk among subgroups of drug and alcohol-involved men who have sex with men. For abstracts of the posters, and links to more information about the conference, see our Geneva Update, and view the press release. CBC calls for declaration of The Congressional Black Caucus called upon Donna Public Health Emergency Shalala, Secretary of Health and Human Services to declare AIDS/HIV a public health emergency. Key to the plan developed by the CBC is the integration of substance abuse treatment with HIV prevention and care, as well as prevention and treatment of HIV in prison populations. Representatives also stated a strategy must be developed to combat anti-gay bias. On the record Want to know how your representative voted on the ban against needle exchange programs? Check out the discussion and the vote from the Congressional Record. (If you want more info, check the Library of Congress search engine, search for needle exchange.) Drinks, Drugs and HIV As the weather warms up and some of us begin to drag ourselves out of winter hibernation and onto the party circuit, it's a good time to review the impact of drugs and drinking on people with HIV. We start this month's discussion with an informative brochure from Gay Men's Health Crisis. Name Reporting The Illinois Department of Public Health opened up the in Illinois discussion of its proposed rule change to require mandatory reporting of names of HIV positive people. The results of the discussion are unclear: some sources say there is now a work group to study other options, while IDPH is still stating the proposal is going on as scheduled, meaning the proposal will continue to be refined over the next few months. Many health organizations and AIDS treatment advocates are opposing names reporting. While tracking HIV is a crucial part of treatment and research, experts say there are other ways to ensure effective tracking without names. We will keep you posted as details of the proposed rule change become available. Viagra and Pls Reports indicate Viagra may interact with drugs commonly used to fight HIV, including some protease inhibitors and antibiotics. There also may be possible adverse, or even fatal, effects of combining amyl nitrate (poppers) with Viagra. Check out the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association press release and JAMA's article for more information. 1 of 3 10/23/98 6:20 PM Take AIM News & Information: In the News http://www.takeaim.org/newsinfo.htm HIV as Disability? UPDATE: The U.S. Supreme Court has decided HIV is considered a disability protected under the Americans with Disabilities Act. As we reported last month, Bragdon V. Abbot, centered on the refusal of a dentist to fill the cavity of a patient with HIV unless she agreed to have the procedure done in a hospital. For information on the case, see Chicago Sun-Times or The Washington Post. PEP Talk In the launch of our Feedback column, the discussion of Post-Exposure Prevention continues. Tell us what you think. We'll include your comments in next month's Feedback. Undetectable Viral Load Studies indicate undetectable viral load in the blood doesn't mean the virus is gone. It still hides in semen and in the brain. Barebacking Well into the second decade of the AIDS crisis, it seems more people are engaging in barebacking (sex without a condom). Sometimes it's intentional, either as a part of a philosophy of risk taking, or as acceptable risk between HIV-positive partners. If you are into barebacking, we'd like to talk with you. We are currently conducting interviews with men in the Chicago area who are having sex with other men, who feel there is no longer a need to be quite so careful, maybe because of the availability of new treatments, or maybe just because The interviews take about an hour and a half, and a small stipend is offered. To get more information or sign up for an interview, please give us a call at 773.525.0246, and tell 'em you saw it on the web. Let's talk about Sex Can you talk to your doctor about your sexuality? Check out this Washington Post article for information on how a doctor can talk about sex more comfortably with his or her patients, including suggestions by our own Dr. David Ostrow. Celebrate Summer with the AIM Ah, summer. Parades, lakefront gatherings, late night Boys strolls down Halsted. Through it all, AIM is out and about at area venues. For a complete schedule of when and where you can meet us to talk, check out this month's calendar. Want more? With HIV as with the rest of life, act locally, think globally. Click here for a list of resources in Chicago, and links to publications, information and organizations all over the planet. From the TAKEAIM Library Behavioural and psychosocial implications of the new protease inhibitors by David Ostrow, M.D., Ph.D. A discussion of the implications of the new treatment options and viral load measurements. Wake Up! Turn Off the auto-pilot Now by Stephen Gendin. A reality check in the wake of media hype about the successes of new treatments. Reprinted from the December issue of Community Prescription 2 of 3 10/23/98 6:20 PM Take AIM News & Information: In the News http://www.takeaim.org/newsinfo.htm. Service Info Pack. 0000 DISCUSS ABOUT US PRODUCTS HOME Number of visits to this page: 3 of 3 10/23/98 6:20 PM IMPROVING HIV SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS This propos al would The President has proposed a demonstration project providing States with funds to develop HIV surveillance systems that utilize privacy protection codes rather than names based reporting. These States would be required to apply their disease surveillance strategies in ways that link infected individuals with critical health care and social support services. As a condition of recieving funds, States would also be required to evaluate their new surveillance systems. BACKGROUND Importance of Accurate HIV Surveillance Systems In 1995, AIDS became the leading cause of death for all Americans aged 25-44. Over half a million American men, women and children have been diagnosed with AIDS, and more than 300,000 have already died from this disease. VAIDS strikes hardest against younger people, robbing the country of valuable energy, talent and promise for the future. It is vitally important to have an accurate national surveillance system in order to allocate limited resources, target and evaluate prevention efforts, and project the future of the epidemic. antdated Current Surveillance Systems Are No Longer Adequate Presently, all people diagnosed with AIDS are reported by name to State and local health departments. State officials then delete identifying information from the reports and forward them to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for compilation of national data on the AIDS epidemic. At the beginning of the epidemic, this was a reliable way to determine the extent of infection nationwide, because people with HIV routinely developed AIDS within a very short time period. However, because of the success of new HIV drug therapies, people are living longer with asymptomatic HIV disease. Therefore, the current method of tracking the AIDS epidemic is no longer reliable, because it is based solely on the end stages of disease progression. Health care organizations, AIDS advocates, and Federal, State, and local public health officials are all in agreement that generating better data on the scope of the HIV epidemic is essential. Without assistment States Prive States Work Independently to Track Levels of HIV Infection State and local public health officials are currently working together to develop accurate HIV surveillance systems. Thirty-one States have chosen to implement name-based HIV surveillance systems that build off their current surveillance systems. Because of privacy concerns, three States (Maryland, Massachussetts, and Texas) have chosen to implement non-name based systems, where HIV infected individuals would be reported to public health officials by a unique code that cannot be traced rather than by name. Although there is a high level of interest in developing non-name based surveillance systems, there is a significant cost associated with the development of these systems because there is no existing public health infrastructure to support them. sig#s: Patin The Advocate Community Favors Non-Name Based Surveillance Systems Advocates have come out strongly in favor of non-name based HIV surveillance systems. There is considerable concern that mandatory name based reporting will discourage people from getting tested and seeking treatment. In addition, because people are living longer with asymptomatic HIV disease, public health officials would have the names of people with HIV on record for an extended period of time, increasing the possibility of confidentiality breaches. Advocates believe that non-name based surveillance systems will reduce the fear of stigma and the loss of confidentiality while enabling the collection of better data on HIV infection. Initial Evaluation of Non-Name Based Reporting Systems is Inconclusive Information from CDC studies here. Movement Towards a National HIV Surveillance System Novembr. The CDC has developed draft regulations that would require States to implement HIV surveillance systems by April of 1999. As presently drafted, these regulations emphasize the importance of State flexibility when developing a reporting system. They do not require any particular method of surveillance and establish performance measures for both names based and non-names based systems. POLICY DESCRIPTION The President has proposed a three part demonstration project to explore the issues surrounding non-name based HIV surveillance. 1. Developing New Surveillance Systems States will be provided funding to develop and implement HIV surveillance systems that use encryption and other non-name based methodologies to track the level of HIV infection in their State. These systems will utilize "privacy protection codes" rather than the names of individuals when forwarding data to the State Department of Health, ensuring that only patients and health care providers have identifying information on the HIV status of individuals. 2. Linking Infected Individuals with Critical Health Care and Social Support Services States must enhance their current efforts to link infected individuals with critical health care and social support services. Special outreach efforts to educate individuals about the new privacy safeguards and the importance of early diagnosis and treatment should be undertaken. In addition, strategies to improve referral to primary care sources should be implemented for those infected individuals being tested at publicly funded sites. 3. Evaluating the New Surveillance Systems States would be required to perform a technical evaluation of their new surveillance systems that focused on rates of record duplication and lost or missing data. They would also be required to evaluate the success of the outreach, education, and patient referral strategies in promoting HIV testing and early entry of infected individuals into primary care. BUDGET EFFECTS Unknown. ADVAN7448 T privacy agenda D advocate support IMPROVING HIV SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS Summary: ENO italies.) This proposal would fund a demonstration project providing States with funds to develop HIV do surveillance systems that utilize privacy protection codes rather than names based reporting. Ined 1 These States would be required to apply their disease surveillance strategies in ways that link infected individuals with critical health care and social support services. As a condition of this? recieving funds, States would also be required to evaluate their new surveillance systems. yes - BACKGROUND underlined it's + Bold No good Bukets - Importance of Accurate HIV Surveillance Systems. In 1995, AIDS became the leading cause of death for all Americans aged 25-44. Over half a million American men, women and children have been diagnosed with AIDS, and more than 300,000 have already died from this disease. It is vitally important to have an accurate national surveillance system in order to allocate limited resources, target and evaluate prevention efforts, and project the future of the epidemic. Surveillance Systems Are Outdated. Presently, all people diagnosed with AIDS are reported by name to State and local health departments. State officials then delete identifying information from the reports and forward them to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) for compilation of national data on the AIDS epidemic. At the beginning of the epidemic, this was a reliable way to determine the extent of infection nationwide, because people with HIV routinely developed AIDS within a very short time period. However, because of the success of new drug therapies, people are living longer with asymptomatic HIV disease. Therefore, because the current method of tracking the AIDS epidemic is based solely on the end stages of disease progression, it is no longer reliable. Health care organizations, AIDS advocates, and Federal, State, and local public health officials are all in agreement that generating better data on the scope of the HIV epidemic is essential. Present State Surveillance Systems Raise Privacy Concerns. State and local public health officials are currently working together to develop accurate HIV surveillance systems. Thirty- one States have chosen to implement name-based HIV surveillance systems. Although this issue is still being debated, there is concern in both the public health and advocacy communities that name-based surveillance systems would discourage infected individuals from seeking testing and treatment because of the fear of confidentiality breaches. In addition, because people are living longer with asymptomatic HIV disease, public health officials would have the names of people with HIV on record for an extended period of time, increasing the possibility of confidentiality breaches. Although there is a high level of interest in developing non-name based surveillance systems that include essential privacy protections, the significant cost associated with the development of these systems is discouraging for many States. to be released in Movement fowards a National HIV Surveillance System. The CDC has developed draft regulations that would require States to implement HIV surveillance systems by April of 1999. As presently drafted, these regulations emphasize the importance of State flexibility when developing a reporting system. They do not require any particular method of surveillance and but establish performance measures for both names based and non-names based systems. create l POLICY DESCRIPTION This proposal world establish a The President has proposed a three part demonstration project to explore the issues surrounding non-name based HIV surveillance. [Questions Competitive? How many States? Developing New Surveillance Systems year ? Admin- States willipe provided funding to develop and implement HIV surveillance systems that istess use encryption and other non-name based methodologies to track the level of HIV infection in their State. These systems will would utilize "privacy protection codes" rather than the names of individuals when forwarding data to the State Department of Health, ensuring that only patients and health care providers have identifying information on the HIV status of individuals. Recent evaluations of existing non-name based surveillance systems indicate that States have higher rates of missing data and may have difficulty conducting adequate follow-up with infected individuals in order to collect HIV risk information. States would need to adequately address these issues in their grant proposals. 2). Linking Infected Individuals with Critical Health Care and Social Support Services States must ehhance their current efforts to link infected individuals with critical health care and social support services. Special outreach efforts to educate individuals about the condition new privacy safeguards and the importance of early diagnosis and treatment should be receiving Federal undertaken. In addition, strategies to improve referral to primary care sources should be Funds implemented for those infected individuals being tested at publicly funded sites. is Evaluating the New Surveillance Systems States would be required to perform a technical evaluation of their new surveillance systems that focused on rates of record duplication and lost or missing data. They would also be required to evaluate the success of the outreach, education, and patient referral strategies in promoting HIV testing and early entry of infected individuals into primary care. POLICY RATIONALE Funding a demonstration project that would assist States in the development and implementation of non-name based HIV surveillance systems would be advantageous for the following reasons: Non-name Based Surveillance Systems Provide Greater Privacy Protections AIDS advocates have come out strongly in favor of non-name based HIV surveillance systems. said Sharten- earliar There is considerable concern that mandatory name based reporting will discourage people from getting tested and seeking treatment. Advocates believe that non-name based surveillance systems will reduce the fear of stigma and the loss of confidentiality while enabling the collection of better data on HIV infection. Non-name Based Surveillance Systems Protect the Hispanic Community The AIDS epidemic disproportionately affects the Hispanic population. In 1997, the incidence of AIDS among Hispanics was 37.7 per 100,000 individuals, almost 4 times the incidence rate for whites. There is a widespread fear among the Hispanic population that mandatory names reporting for HIV infection will eventually lead to deportation of infected individuals. This provides a strong disincentive to request testing or receive care. The implementation of non- name based surveillance systems will help assure the Hispanic community that their infection status will not be used by State or Federal immigrantion agencies to discriminate against them when they apply for citizenship or naturalization. Provides a Test Case for National Unique Medical Identifiers There was a great deal of concern when the Administration proposed to implement a national system of unique medical identifiers. We have since stated that we would not move to implement such a system until we have passed privacy protection legislation. However, implementing a non-names based surveillance system to monitor the level of HIV infection differs significantly from the original Federal proposal. This system would be developed at State option for a limited subset of individuals who would otherwise be identified by name to State public health agencies. It is important to note, however, that if States are able to design non-name based surveillance systems that are able to meet current public health needs and adequately protect the privacy of HIV infected individuals, they may provide a roadmap towards designing a portable medical record that uses unique medical identifiers. BUDGET EFFECTS Unknown.