The impact of AIDS on state and local health departments: issues and a few answers.
- 1 April 1988
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 78 (4) , 387-393
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.78.4.387
Abstract
Owing to large differences in the incidence of AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) and in public health resources and priorities, the impact of AIDS on state and local health departments has been variable. Nonetheless, health departments everywhere are being held responsible for surveillance and control of the HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) epidemic which we believe requires, at minimum, convenient, free HIV testing and counseling; expanded HIV services in sexually transmitted diseases clinics and substance treatment centers; locally oriented AIDS information/education; notification of persons unknowingly exposed to HIV; restrictive measures for HIV-infected persons who, after counseling, persist in exposing others; regulation or closure of public establishments in which HIV transmission is likely to result; and confidential reporting of all HIV test results to public health departments. In Colorado new legislation was passed to require reporting of HIV test results, to provide the reports with near absolute protections against unauthorized disclosure, and to modify quarantine statues to incorporate rights to due process, appeals, and confidentially. States in which there is a legal basis for discrimination against gay men will need to rectify this problem first. There is no evidence that reporting of HIV infections in Colorado has adversely affected the rate at which persons with HIV risk behaviors volunteer to be tested. For Denver and Colorado Departments of Health, more than 70 per cent of the estimated $2,796,000 expended in AIDS activities during 1987 was federal.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- The HIV antibody test: why gay and bisexual men want or do not want to know their results.1987
- The prevention of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in the United States. An objective strategy for medicine, public health, business, and the community.1987
- The prevention of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in the United States. An objective strategy for medicine, public health, business, and the communityPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1987
- EPIDEMIOLOGY OF THE ACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROME (AIDS)1Epidemiologic Reviews, 1985
- Intensive Screening for Gonorrhea, Syphilis, and Hepatitis B in a Gay Bathhouse Does Not Lower the Prevalence of InfectionSexually Transmitted Diseases, 1980
- Screening for gonorrhea and syphilis in the gay baths--Denver, Colorado.American Journal of Public Health, 1977