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The Coburn HIV Prevention Act of 1997

April 21, 1997

The HIV Prevention Act of 1997 (H.R. 1062), introduced by Representative Tom Coburn (R-OK), has little to do with preventing HIV transmission. This bill seeks to federally mandate costly and ineffective testing-related measures that undermine proven community-based prevention strategies already being implemented across the country. Instead of allowing states and communities to effectively respond to the specific demographics of the HIV epidemic in their jurisdiction, this legislation represents one-size fits all solutions from Washington that tie the hands of these communities. In fact, states and local communities already have the flexibility to implement provisions of the Coburn bill as part of their prevention strategies, and have, through state law or regulation, as deemed appropriate.

States would be required to implement all of the bill's provisions as a condition of receiving federal Medicaid funds, thereby jeopardizing the source of health care for more than half of all people living with AIDS. No new funding is provided, despite the fact that the Association of State and Territorial Health Officers (ASTHO) estimates that implementation of this legislation would require at least 265 statutory or regulatory changes nationwide, and cost approximately $420 million a year. In fact, among the laws and regulations states would be required to change in order to comply with these new unfunded federal mandates are laws and regulations they enacted to comply with conditions of the federal Ryan White Care Act. At the same time, this legislation does nothing to support community-based prevention efforts that have been proven to be highly effective in changing risk behaviors and significantly reducing the transmission of HIV.

I. National Partner Notification

The HIV Prevention Act would mandate that states report the identities of all people testing positive for HIV, as well as the identities of their sexual and needle sharing partners, to the federal government. These lists would be used by the CDC to establish a national partner notification system, and a state's list would be shared with other states so that individuals could be tracked down and informed that they may have been exposed to HIV by a current or past partner. Additionally, all states would be required to implement mandatory names reporting systems for their own surveillance purposes, even those states that have already implemented unique identifier systems or that measure the number of cases of HIV infection by collecting anonymous demographic information.

II. HIV Testing of Sexual Offenders

The HIV Prevention Act requires that states test accused sexual offenders for HIV within 48 hours of the filing of an information or indictment, whether the victim requests it or not, and that the results be disclosed "as soon thereafter as practicable" to "the victim; the defendant; the attorneys of the victim; the prosecuting attorneys; the judge presiding at the trial, if any; and the principal public health official for the local jurisdiction in which the crime is alleged to have occurred" --seriously compromising the confidentiality of the victim.

III. HIV Testing of Patients

The HIV Prevention Act allows medical professionals to refuse treatment to a patient unless the patient is tested for HIV.

IV. Sense of Congress Provisions

The HIV Prevention Act expresses the sense of the Congress that States should criminalize irresponsible behaviors by those who are infected.

The HIV Prevention Act expresses the sense of Congress that strict confidentiality "should" be maintained in carrying out the provisions of this Act.

V. Other Provisions

The HIV Prevention Act of 1997 includes a hodge-podge of other provisions regarding funeral service practitioners, adoption agencies, and health insurers, all of which are as burdensome and ill-conceived as the provisions highlighted above. Enormous strides have been made in addressing the HIV epidemic on the federal and state level. This Act is a collection of counter-productive unfunded federal mandates that will only divert resources from real prevention efforts and further stigmatize and frighten people living with and at risk for HIV. For all these reasons, AIDS Action Council strongly opposes the Coburn HIV Prevention Act of 1997.


For more information, contact:

AIDS Action Council
1875 Connecticut Avenue NW #700
Washington DC 20009
202-986-1300, extension 3053
202-986-1345 (fax)
202-332-9614 (tty)
E-Mail: aidsaction@aidsaction.org




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