Guest guest Posted April 22, 2008 Report Share Posted April 22, 2008 Dear Forum Re: /message/8667 Capt Kumar is at last saying it out loud. The idea that testing equal stigma has been a crazy idea from the start. If people had been tested and contact tracing done early on, it would have saved 40 million lives. How much more death and suffering before; 1) we do proper information on non-sexual contamination via blood (dental care, injections, tatooing, blood collection, blood transfusion, ) and 2) we do contact tracing and really help people stop contaminating others. Recommendations that all were a condom is idiocy. It has not worked for 25 years and will not start working now, it's not even intended to work! It's a sham. My friend Mariette Correa has published a book with Dr Deoddata Gore who manages a drop in center for HIV (and Gisselquist) and their book " Blood-borne HIV " is a 'how to' protect yourself for everybody, everywhere. It is published by Orient Longman Private limited in Hyderabad and all money from sales is given by the authors to the drop in center of PLWHAs of Dr Gore Time to end stigma of PLWHAS and stigmatize the fools managing the global and national AIDS campaign is now! Nance Garance Upham e-mail: <garance@...> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 28, 2008 Report Share Posted April 28, 2008 Dear Friends, Re: /message/8667 Mandatory testing goes with a number of positive and negative outcomes. When we say mandatory, it is applicable to everybody at all stages in life, in all walks of life, and will open up a whole number of issues.Some questions are as follows-- 1. Who will administer the test? 2. Who will disclose the information to the patient? 3. Will there be a registry? 5. Will there be a second test in a few months? 6. Will there be counseling available while disclosing the results? 7. Will the dependents of the tested-one be informed (either for positive or negative outcomes)? 8. Where will the disclosure of the sero-positive status fall in the legal panorama (will there be mandatory information disclosure to the partner, patients of a sero-positive clinician...etc.)? 9. How will the aspect of social stigma be handled (micro-aspects as well as macro-aspects)? 10. Have we studied the outcomes of mandatory testing in other countries long enough before we apply it to the local population, culture and social settings? 11. Is HIV and AIDS the only disease this applies to (there are a whole number of other diseases that are comorbidities and some even more potent as disease and health outcomes)? 12. When we have a lot of easily preventable infectious diseases that are plaguing the population, why are we maily concentrating on HIV? I was the first J & J Medical Inc. Infectious Diseases Post Doctoral Fellow in Dentistry in the early 1990s and the same questions are popping up now. It still has not been implemented in the place these debates came up. Should we not wait and use a medical model of asking the patient during a medical contact/visit rather than make it mandatory? I have now been working with the people in India in trying to set up a higher level of Dental Safety including Occupational Safety for Oral Health Professionals in India and get this question every time I speak in India. Best Wishes, Raghunath Puttaiah BDS, MPH Plano, Texas, USA e-mail: <puttaiah.raghunath@...> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.