Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report
'Vast Majority' of Clinton Global Initiative Conference Attendees Made, Kept Commitments, Former President Clinton Says in NPR Interview
Indian Not-For-Profit Organization Establishes School for HIV-Positive Children
Road Construction in Tanzania Could Increase HIV Transmission, Study Says
Health Experts Urge Texas To Distribute Condoms to Prison Inmates
Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report Highlights Recently Released Journal Articles
Public Health & Education
CDC Recommends Routine HIV Testing for U.S. Residents Ages 13 to 64, Dropping Written Consent, Pretest Counseling Requirements
[Sep 22, 2006]
CDC on Thursday released revised recommendations on HIV testing in the U.S. that say HIV tests should become a routine part of medical care for residents ages 13 to 64 and requirements for written consent and pretest counseling be dropped, the Washington Post reports (Brown, Washington Post, 9/22). CDC estimates that about 25% of HIV-positive people in the U.S. do not know their status. Many physicians believe that routine testing could lead to an earlier diagnosis and earlier treatment (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 5/8). According to an agency release, the recommendations, published in the Sept. 22 edition of CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, were designed to "simplify the HIV testing process" and "overcome several barriers that hindered implementation" of the agency's previous guidelines -- released in 1993 -- calling for tests to be given to "high-risk individuals" and to all patients "in health care settings" with HIV prevalence of more than 1% (CDC release, 9/21). According to the revised guidelines, health care providers should continue routine HIV testing unless they establish that less than one of every 1,000 patients tested is HIV-positive, "at which point such screening is no longer warranted" (Branson et al., MMWR, 9/22). States can choose to adopt and modify the guidelines, the New York Times reports (McNeil, New York Times, 9/22). CDC has been working on the revised guidelines for about three years, receiving feedback from more than 100 groups, including HIV/AIDS patient advocacy groups and physician associations (Stobbe, AP/Forbes, 9/21). According to the Los Angeles Times, the recommendations "carry no legal force," but now insurance companies are more likely to cover the cost of the tests (Maugh, Los Angeles Times, 9/21). If health care providers follow the guidelines, the number of HIV-positive people who are unaware of their status might be reduced by two-thirds, the Post reports (Washington Post, 9/22). Lawrence Gostin, associate dean at the Georgetown University Law Center, said that a physician might incur legal issues if he or she does not at least tell a patient about the value of HIV testing and that patient has contracted HIV (Hendrick, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 9/22). CDC in the release said it will issue additional guidelines for physicians by early next year and provide "model approaches and practical tools" for implementing HIV testing (CDC release, 9/21). Consent and Counseling Recommendations Under current testing regulations, many states require individuals to participate in a 20-minute counseling session before obtaining an HIV test. In addition, people in some states must sign a separate informed-consent form, which details the risks and benefits of the test (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 5/8). The revised CDC guidelines say providers do not have to require patients to sign written consent forms or undergo counseling before receiving an HIV test, but physicians must allow patients to opt out of the test, USA Today reports (Sternberg, USA Today, 9/22). "[P]atients should be informed orally or in writing that HIV testing will be performed unless they decline," the recommendations say, adding, "Information should include an explanation of HIV infection and the meanings of positive and negative test results, and the patient should be offered an opportunity to ask questions and to decline testing." The recommendations also say that it is "essential" that physicians make "[a]ctive efforts ... to ensure that HIV-infected patients receive their positive test results and linkage to clinical care, counseling, support and prevention services" (Washington Post, 9/22). In addition, the agency "continues to encourage prevention counseling for all patients where feasible" and "intensive HIV prevention counseling for high-risk populations will remain a vital component of community-based HIV prevention interventions" (CDC fact sheet, 9/21). Testing Pregnant Women The guidelines say that all pregnant women should be tested for the virus unless they opt out and that women who inject drugs, are commercial sex workers or who live in a higher prevalence region should be tested again in the third trimester of pregnancy, the New York Times reports (New York Times, 9/22). The guidelines also recommend that women in labor whose HIV status is unknown should be administered a rapid HIV test, and if a test cannot be administered before delivery, both the woman and the infant should immediately be given a rapid test postpartum (CDC fact sheet, 9/21). According to the Houston Chronicle, the recommendations for expanded testing of pregnant women aim to reduce the number of mother-to-child HIV transmissions in the U.S. There were 240 cases of vertical HIV transmission in 2005, the Chronicle reports (Hopper, Houston Chronicle, 9/22). Reaction "We urgently need new approaches to reach the quarter-million Americans with HIV who do not realize they are infected," CDC Director Julie Gerberding, said, adding, "People with HIV have a right to know that they are infected so they can seek treatment and take steps to protect themselves and their partners" (Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 9/22). The American Medical Association said it supports the changes, and many physicians are expected to endorse the recommendations. "These recommendations are important for early diagnosis and to reduce the stigma still associated with HIV testing," Nancy Nielsen, an AMA board member, said (New York Times, 9/22). Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) added that the recommendations will "greatly enhance our ability to control the spread of this disease and improve the lives of those living with it" (AIDS Healthcare Foundation release, 9/21). More than 12 HIV/AIDS advocacy groups released a statement critical of the recommendation to remove the requirement for pretest counseling. "We fear that some health care settings will interpret today's announcement as a call for universal screening and test patients without informing them or arming them with the information they need to avoid putting others at risk," David Munar, associate director of AIDS Foundation Chicago, said. Peter Staley, founder of ACT UP, said that while "abandoning written informed consent raises issues" such as privacy and stigma, he supports the recommendations because "the bottom line is that this would probably save lives" (USA Today, 9/22). AIDS Project Los Angeles in a release said that while it supports the new guidelines, the group is unsure about who will pay for increased testing costs and whether it will deplete "already inadequate HIV/AIDS funding." APLA Executive Director Craig Thompson said, "This mandate would require at least an additional $6 billion, yet the federal government has cut domestic funding for care, treatment and services over the past five years," adding, "Conducting millions of HIV tests without appropriating the money for follow-up care is an empty promise" (APLA release, 9/21). Timothy Mastro, acting director of CDC's Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, said that while there is not a "direct link" between the recommendations and coverage of the test costs, "[w]e think this will contribute to insurers and Medicare, Medicaid covering it, but it's not an automatic" (Atlanta Journal Constitution, 9/22). "It's all in the implementation," Munar said, adding, "I am concerned that in some settings that patients will be shortchanged" (Washington Post, 9/22).
NBC's "Nightly News" on Thursday reported on CDC's recommendations. The segment includes comments from Thomas Frieden, New York City health commissioner, and Greg Payne, director of the Washington, D.C., Department of Health (Bazell, "Nightly News," NBC, 9/21). The complete segment is available online in Windows Media. In addition, NPR's "All Things Considered" on Thursday reported on the recommendations. The segment includes comments from Brandon Armani, an administrator with Unity Health Care; Jean McGuire, former assistant commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health; Mastro; and U.S. residents (Shapiro, "All Things Considered," NPR, 9/21). The complete segment is available online in RealPlayer.
Global Challenges
'Vast Majority' of Clinton Global Initiative Conference Attendees Made, Kept Commitments, Former President Clinton Says in NPR Interview
[Sep 22, 2006]
The "vast majority" of attendees at the annual Clinton Global Initiative Conference this week made a commitment to address social and humanitarian issues, such as HIV/AIDS, or kept commitments made at the 2005 conference, former President Clinton said on Thursday in an interview on NPR's "Morning Edition." Clinton said that many CGI conference attendees are "tired of going to meetings and talking. They want to come to a meeting where they can learn some things and then do something." Clinton at the conference discussed a plan to impose an airline ticket tax to fund an international drug purchase facility and HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria treatment and prevention programs (Inskeep, "Morning Edition," NPR, 9/21). Brazil, Chile, France, Norway and the United Kingdom on Tuesday at the 61st session of the U.N. General Assembly announced the plan. The five countries through the Geneva-based organization UNITAID, an international drug purchase facility, plan to pool purchasing power and have asked the Clinton Foundation to negotiate with pharmaceutical companies for bulk discounts on antiretroviral drugs. The tax is expected to raise about $248 million for HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria programs (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 9/19).
The NPR story is available online. The complete NPR segment is available online in RealPlayer. In addition, CNN's "Larry King Live" on Wednesday included an interview with Clinton about several issues, including the airline ticket fee and Clinton's thoughts about the likelihood of success for global health campaigns to fight HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria (King, "Larry King Live," CNN, 9/20). The complete transcript of the program is available online.
Kaisernetwork.org will be webcasting the CGI annual meeting live from Sept. 20 through Sept. 22.
Indian Not-For-Profit Organization Establishes School for HIV-Positive Children
[Sep 22, 2006]
The not-for-profit organization Karunalayam last week opened a school in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh that plans to educate exclusively HIV-positive children who have been turned away by other schools, officials said Thursday, AFP/Today Online reports. The school, which is located in the southern Warrangal district of Andhra Pradesh, currently has seven students and a staff composed of one HIV/AIDS counselor, one teacher and one nurse, according to AFP/Today Online. "We teach them local and English alphabets, mathematics and also take care of their medical needs. Here the concept is of exclusive care. In some schools HIV-positive kids are pushed around by other children and looked down upon," Jyotish Joseph, director of Karunalayam, said, adding, "Others deny them admission. They face no such problems in our school." According to Joseph, school organizers plan to increase enrollment to about 25 HIV-positive students and open similar schools in other regions. "In India there is a lack of awareness about HIV/AIDS among teachers and parents," Joseph said, adding, "There needs to be more education" (AFP/Today Online, 9/21).
Road Construction in Tanzania Could Increase HIV Transmission, Study Says
[Sep 22, 2006]
Although the construction of roads in rural areas of Tanzania has boosted economic opportunity, it also could increase HIV transmission, according to a report by the Tanzania Civil Engineering Contractors Association and the African Medical and Research Foundation, IRIN/PlusNews reports. Tanzania in the 2006-2007 fiscal year plans to build more than 2,000 kilometers of roads. Roads and bridges connect villages -- which often have low HIV prevalence -- to cities -- which often have high HIV prevalence -- the report says. In addition, road construction employs "the youngest and fittest members of any community" and "harbors the very people that the epidemic targets," the report says. According to the report, highly mobile civil engineers and technical staff who live in construction sites, separated from their families and frequently bored and intoxicated, often engage in sex with local women. Because there often are more men than women in a village, women might have sex with multiple men, the report says, adding that condoms frequently are not readily available and when they are, they often have expired or have been stored incorrectly. The report urges the government to consider road construction workers as a vulnerable group to HIV transmission and make HIV prevention, treatment, care and support programs for them a priority (IRIN/PlusNews, 9/20).
Across The Nation
Health Experts Urge Texas To Distribute Condoms to Prison Inmates
[Sep 22, 2006]
Health experts have urged Texas to distribute condoms at no cost to prison inmates to combat the spread of HIV, the Houston Press reports (Malisow, Houston Press, 9/21). July statistics show that of 154,000 prisoners in the state, 2,627 are HIV-positive. The state prison system in August proposed a change to its HIV testing policy from saying new inmates "should be tested" upon entering prison to saying they "shall be tested" unless they refuse the test. About 80% of inmates have agreed to take an HIV test upon entering prison since the state began its testing program, and prison system statistics show more than 38,700 inmates received HIV tests in 2005, 372 of whom tested HIV-positive. Texas law mandates that results of HIV tests are confidential and that HIV-positive inmates are not separated from HIV-negative inmates (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 8/24). Heather Mitchell, a member of ACT UP Austin, said that distributing condoms to inmates would be an inexpensive method of reducing HIV transmission. According to ACT UP, distributing condoms in state prisons would cost the Texas Department of Criminal Justice less than $300,000 annually. In addition, it is likely that federal, state and local HIV prevention funding would cover most of the program's costs, according to ACT UP. "Prisoners are engaging in sex, and condoms are a proven HIV prevention tool, so it just makes sense that providing condoms is going to decrease the number of infections," Mitchell said, adding, "And from a public health standpoint, anything that decreases HIV infection is a good idea." According to TDCJ officials, condom distribution is not allowed in state prisons because it would violate the department's zero-tolerance policy on sexual activity. TDCJ spokesperson Michelle Lyons said that the department is not ignoring the issue and is addressing it through programs that do not violate the zero-tolerance policy. According to the Press, the TDCJ and AIDS Foundation Houston have launched "Wall Talk" and "Safe Prisons," two peer-education programs that aim to combat the spread of HIV among inmates (Houston Press, 9/21).
Recent Releases
Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report Highlights Recently Released Journal Articles
[Sep 22, 2006]
The following highlights recently released journal articles on HIV/AIDS. - "Causes of Death Among Persons With AIDS in the Era of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy: New York City," Annals of Internal Medicine: Judith Sackoff and colleagues at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene examined the death certificates of 68,669 HIV-positive people ages 13 and older who died from 1999 through 2004 and whose deaths were reported to the New York City HIV/AIDS Reporting System and Vital Statistics Registry (Sackoff et al., Annals of Internal Medicine, 9/19). The study finds that 26.3% of HIV-positive people in the city who died from 1999 through 2004 did not die of AIDS-related illnesses. This represents a 32% increase since 1999, during which slightly less than 20% of HIV-positive people died of causes other than AIDS-related illnesses, Reuters reports. According to the study, among the deaths attributed to non-AIDS-related illness, 31% percent of HIV-positive people died because of substance abuse; nearly 24% died of cardiovascular disease; and 20% died of cancer unrelated to HIV/AIDS (Reuters, 9/18). The researchers concluded, "Reducing deaths from these causes requires a shift in the health care model for persons with AIDS from a primary focus on managing HIV infection to providing care that addresses all aspects of physical and mental health" (Annals of Internal Medicine, 9/19).
- "Discordance Between Sexual Behavior and Self-Reported Sexual Identity: A Population-Based Survey of New York City Men," Annals of Internal Medicine: Preeti Pathela of the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and colleagues analyzed the findings of a 2003 health department survey of 4,193 men ages 18 and older residing in New York City, the Philadelphia Inquirer reports (Fallik, Philadelphia Inquirer, 9/19). Participants -- 4% of whom said they were homosexual; 91% of whom said they were heterosexual; and the rest of whom said they were bisexual, "unsure" or did not answer -- were asked about their sexual behavior and their sexual orientation, Reuters Health reports. The study finds that about 10% of the men who said they were heterosexual had slept with a man but not a woman in the previous year, and that such men were less likely to have had an HIV test than men who said they were homosexual (Reuters Health, 9/18). The study also finds that 22% of men who have sex with men but who described themselves as heterosexual used condoms, compared with 55% of men who considered themselves gay. The majority of self-described heterosexual MSM were minorities or were born outside the U.S., researchers said (Philadelphia Inquirer, 9/19). The study also finds that self-described heterosexuals in general had fewer sexual partners compared with men who considered themselves homosexual. According to the researchers, the findings imply that physicians should not depend on a man's self-described sexual orientation when assessing his risk for contracting HIV or other sexually transmitted infections (Reuters Health, 9/18).
- "Emergence of Drug Resistance Is Associated With an Increased Risk of Death Among Patients First Starting HAART," PLoS Medicine: Robert Hogg of the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS and colleagues analyzed the health records of 1,138 HIV-positive people who began highly active antiretroviral therapy from Aug. 1, 1996, through Sept. 30, 1999, to determine the impact of the emergence of drug-resistant mutations on survival rates. The study finds that during the follow-up period -- which was an average of five years -- an 18.2% mortality rate, or 207 deaths, occurred. In addition, 26.5% of participants during follow up were identified as being resistant to HAART, the study finds. According to the study, resistance to HAART was associated with a 1.75 times higher mortality rate overall, and when each class of antiretroviral was considered separately, resistance to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors were associated with a 3.02 times higher mortality rate. The researchers concluded that the "emergence of resistance to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors was associated with a greater risk of subsequent death than was emergence of protease inhibitor resistance. Future research is needed to identify the particular subpopulations of men and women at greatest risk and to elucidate the impact of resistance over a longer follow-up period" (Hogg et al., PLoS Medicine, September 2006).
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