January 21, 2005
Reaction
Some health professionals "applauded" CDC's new guidelines, the AP/ Sun reports. "We have probably the most conservative administration in the last 50 years, and yet the CDC is coming out with a policy that is more progressive than perhaps any country's in the world," Dr. Josh Bamberger of the San Francisco Department of Public Health, who helped create that city's policy on prophylactic HIV treatment, said, adding, "If you had unsafe sex while you were drunk or had a condom break, you should take these medicines -- that is what is recommended by the public health service of the United States. That's amazing" (Leff, AP/Las Vegas Sun, 1/21). However, some physicians who treat HIV-positive patients said that the new guidelines give a "false sense of security," according to the Herald. "I think this will give the wrong message to the public -- that it's OK to have unprotected sexual relations because there are medicines available," Dr. Corklin Steinhart, who treats more than 2,000 HIV-positive patients, said (Miami Herald, 1/21). Other doctors said that the old guidelines were "unconscionable" and put the United States "years behind" other countries, according to the AP/Sun. "While prudish political appointees delayed the CDC release by four years, thousands of unnecessary HIV infections may have occurred," California state Assembly member Paul Koretz (D) -- who sponsored a bill two years ago calling on state health officials to make antiretrovirals available to people exposed to the virus outside of the workplace -- said, adding, "The fact that politicians are uncomfortable talking about sexual exposures to HIV is no reason to withhold vital information from doctors" (AP/Las Vegas Sun, 1/21).
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Reprinted with permission from kaisernetwork.org. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery at www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/hiv. The Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free service of the Kaiser Family Foundation, by The Advisory Board Company. © 2004 by The Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.