Literature DB >> 10417023

Invoking, monitoring, and relinquishing a public health power: the health hold order.

J J Potterat1, R B Rothenberg, J B Muth, D E Woodhouse, S Q Muth.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To describe a quarter-century's use of a public health power (Health Hold Orders) as an adjunct to noncoercive sexually transmitted disease (STD) control efforts in a middle-American city.
METHODS: Persons arrested for prostitution were involuntarily detained for up to 72 hours if they had not been tested for STD within 30 days of arrest. Such persons were mandatorily tested/treated for STD and voluntarily tested for HIV by health department providers in Colorado Springs from mid-1970 through 1994.
RESULTS: Prostitutes viewed temporary detention as inconvenient, but not as inappropriate. Over the 25-year interval, 4,965 examinations in prostitutes yielded 818 positive gonorrhea tests; the 1,564 tests performed under the health-hold order yielded 218 positive results. Positivity rates among prostitutes locally for reportable STD/HIV declined substantially during the period of observation, providing support for termination of the involuntary detention system.
CONCLUSIONS: The involuntary detention system contributed to observed communitywide declines in STD/HIV prevalence. Our experience demonstrates the importance of surveillance and empiric validation in public health practice.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10417023     DOI: 10.1097/00007435-199907000-00007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sex Transm Dis        ISSN: 0148-5717            Impact factor:   2.830


  1 in total

1.  Collaboration between public health and law enforcement: the constitutional challenge.

Authors:  Edward P Richards
Journal:  Emerg Infect Dis       Date:  2002-10       Impact factor: 6.883

  1 in total

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