Literature DB >> 16804750

Conflicting messages: how criminal HIV disclosure laws undermine public health efforts to control the spread of HIV.

Carol L Galletly1, Steven D Pinkerton.   

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.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16804750     DOI: 10.1007/s10461-006-9117-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  AIDS Behav        ISSN: 1090-7165


  33 in total

Review 1.  Understanding HIV disclosure: a review and application of the Disclosure Processes Model.

Authors:  Stephenie R Chaudoir; Jeffrey D Fisher; Jane M Simoni
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2011-04-06       Impact factor: 4.634

2.  Criminalization of HIV transmission and exposure: research and policy agenda.

Authors:  Zita Lazzarini; Carol L Galletly; Eric Mykhalovskiy; Dini Harsono; Elaine O'Keefe; Merrill Singer; Robert J Levine
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2013-06-13       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Preventing HIV transmission via HIV exposure laws: applying logic and mathematical modeling to compare statutory approaches to penalizing undisclosed exposure to HIV.

Authors:  Carol L Galletly; Steven D Pinkerton
Journal:  J Law Med Ethics       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 1.718

Review 4.  A strategy for selecting sexual partners believed to pose little/no risks for HIV: serosorting and its implications for HIV transmission.

Authors:  Lisa A Eaton; Seth C Kalichman; Daniel A O'Connell; William D Karchner
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2009-10

5.  Criminal HIV exposure laws: moving forward.

Authors:  C Galletly; Z Lazzarini; C Sanders; S D Pinkerton
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2014-06

6.  Considerations for Modernized Criminal HIV Laws and Assessment of Legal Protections Against Release of Identified HIV Surveillance Data for Law Enforcement.

Authors:  Carol L Galletly; Nanette Benbow; Amy Killelea; Zita Lazzarini; Ruth Edwards
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2019-09-19       Impact factor: 9.308

Review 7.  Criminalization of HIV Exposure: A Review of Empirical Studies in the United States.

Authors:  Dini Harsono; Carol L Galletly; Elaine O'Keefe; Zita Lazzarini
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2017-01

8.  A quantitative study of Michigan's criminal HIV exposure law.

Authors:  Carol L Galletly; Steven D Pinkerton; Wayne DiFranceisco
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2011-08-23

9.  HIV seropositive status disclosure to prospective sex partners and criminal laws that require it: perspectives of persons living with HIV.

Authors:  C L Galletly; J Dickson-Gomez
Journal:  Int J STD AIDS       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 1.359

10.  Charges for criminal exposure to HIV and aggravated prostitution filed in the Nashville, Tennessee Prosecutorial Region 2000-2010.

Authors:  Carol L Galletly; Zita Lazzarini
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2013-10
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