October 16, 2002
"Given that as many as half of all Californians who are HIV-positive do not know their HIV status, AB 2064 should greatly increase access to HIV testing services by adding newly trained counselors in a more timely manner," said Michael Weinstein, president of AIDS Healthcare Foundation, the sponsor of the bill. "These new counselors would be trained by organizations with first-hand, front-line expertise and experience in testing, particularly among high-risk, often hard-to-reach populations such as bathhouse and sex club patrons," Weinstein said. The bill's author, Assemblymember Gil Cedillo, said, "This bill paves the way for a whole new approach to HIV testing."
AHF's testing program, now the largest in the state, is observing its 5th anniversary and the completion of over 25,000 free HIV tests. Most of the tests were done through ATS programs such as in AHF's Out of the Closet thrift store chain. AHF recently added ATS's in a mobile van, in commercial and public sex venues (CSV) with the Adult Industry Medical Group, and in the County of Los Angeles' jail system. Preliminary July 2002 results from just the CSVs yielded an alarming 17 percent seropositivity rate, with six of the 35 people tested HIV-positive. The benchmark for an HIV testing program to be considered successful at identifying new HIV-positive individuals is approximately 2 percent.
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Excerpted from:
Virus Weekly
10.15.02