Conflicting Messages: How Criminal HIV Disclosure Laws Undermine Public Health Efforts to Control the Spread of HIV
- 28 June 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in AIDS and Behavior
- Vol. 10 (5) , 451-461
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10461-006-9117-3
Abstract
Twenty-three U.S. states currently have laws that make it a crime for persons who have HIV to engage in various sexual behaviors without, in most cases, disclosing their HIV-positive status to prospective sex partners. As structural interventions aimed at reducing new HIV infections, the laws ideally should complement the HIV prevention efforts of public health professionals. Unfortunately, they do not. This article demonstrates how HIV disclosure laws disregard or discount the effectiveness of universal precautions and safer sex, criminalize activities that are central to harm reduction efforts, and offer, as an implicit alternative to risk reduction and safer sex, a disclosure-based HIV transmission prevention strategy that undermines public health efforts. The article also describes how criminal HIV disclosure laws may work against the efforts of public health leaders to reduce stigmatizing attitudes toward persons living with HIV.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Synthetic Chemistry GroupBioTechniques, 2005
- Prevalence and Correlates of HIV Serostatus DisclosureSexually Transmitted Diseases, 2003
- Disclosure of HIV infection: how do women decide to tell?Health Education Research, 2003
- Stigma, social risk, and health policy: Public attitudes toward HIV surveillance policies and the social construction of illness.Health Psychology, 2003
- AIDS and StigmaAmerican Behavioral Scientist, 1999
- The Problem of “Us” Versus “Them” and AIDS StigmaAmerican Behavioral Scientist, 1999
- HIV serostatus disclosure among gay and bisexual men in four American cities: General patterns and relation to sexual practicesAIDS Care, 1998
- Preventive counseling of HIV-positive men and self-disclosure of serostatus to sex partners: New opportunities for prevention.Health Psychology, 1998
- Self‐disclosure and self‐construction among HIV‐positive people: The rhetorical uses of stereotypes and sexAnthropology & Medicine, 1997
- AIDS Law Today: A New Guide for the PublicJournal of Public Health Policy, 1993