Title: Women and Children’s HIV Protection Act of 2003
1Women and Childrens HIV Protection Act of 2003
- Stephanie G.
- Jane P.
- Rena S.
- Susie T.
2Policy Question HR 2049 (Ackerman)
- Should the Public Health Service Act be amended
to include voluntary testing of pregnant women
and mandatory testing of all newborn infants for
the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in the US?
3Public Health Service Act
- Ryan White CARE Act Amendment
- Subpart II, part B of Title XXVI sec. 2625
www.thomas.loc.gov
4Roots of the Women and Childrens HIV Protection
Act
- CDC anonymously tests newborns for HIV
- No disclosure of results to mothers
- Congressman Gary Ackerman (D- Queens/Long Island)
introduces Baby AIDS legislation (1995)
www.house.gov/ackerman/press/babyaids.htm
5Legislative History of Baby AIDS
- Ackerman first proposes Women and Childrens HIV
Protection Act in 1995 - HR 4426 May 11, 2000
- HR 4644 May 2, 2002
- HR 2049 May 9, 2003
6Claims of Harm
- 7,000 HIV women give birth in the US annually
(CDC) - 15 of HIV women get no prenatal care (IOM)
- gt33 HIV infections in newborns preventable with
testing
www.thomas.loc.gov
7Claims of Harm (Cont.)
- Perinatal transmission leading cause of
pediatric HIV infections - Near elimination of perinatal HIV transmission
possible - Post-partum treatment reduces infection risk in
exposed babies
www.mnh.jhpiego.org/best/mtcaids.asp
8Preventing Perinatal Transmission
www.doh.state.fl.us/disease_ctrl/aids/
trends/workshop/perinatal.pdf
9Data - CDC HIV/AIDS Surveillance Report (Dec 2001)
- Cumulative HIV/AIDS cases in the US
www.apla.org
10Data - LADHS Quarterly Surveillance Summary
(1/15/03)
- Cumulative Pediatric AIDS Cases in LA County by
Race/Ethnicity
www.apla.org
11Data - LADHS Quarterly Surveillance Summary
(1/15/03)
- LA County Dept. of Health Services Pediatric
Cases of HIV/AIDS - Children under age 13
- 241 pediatric cases since 1981
- 44 living cases
- mortality rate 79
- 70 perinatally transmitted
- 29 transfusion / hemophilia
- 1 undetermined.
www.apla.org
12Data - Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (December
2002)
- 2002 Global data (children lt15 years)
- Newly infected
- 800,000
- Living with HIV/AIDS
- 3.2 million
- Deaths
- 610,000
- Total deaths since beginning of epidemic
- 5.4 million
www.apla.org
13Data - UNAIDS, World Health Org. (December 2003)
- 14,000 new cases per diem in 2003
- UN report indicates 2.1 2.9 million HIV
children worldwide
www.apla.org
14Contents of HR 2049
- To amend the Public Health Service Act
- Requires HIV counseling for pregnant women
- Mandates testing of newborns of untested mothers
- Proposed budget 82,875,000
www.thomas.loc.gov
15HR 2049 Analysis
- Women tested with informed consent
- Reduces AIDS treatment costs in long-run
- Loophole
- Great bill, but low priority issue
16Similar or Related Bills
- NY Bill/Law (Ackerman 1997)
- CA AB 1676 (Dutra 2003)
- FL HR 4644 (Weldon 2002), S144 (2004)
- CT 1252 (Thompson et al 1999)
17Impact in NY
- Perinatal HIV transmission dropped
- 25 (1997) to 3.5 (current)
- 99 of HIV women children linked to care
(WOW!!) - Similar results expected nationwide
www.thomas.loc.gov
18Key Stakeholders
- Expectant mothers
- Newborn infants
- Society at large
- Individual tates
- no fed grant for states that fail to comply
19Proponents- Political
- Rep. Gary Ackerman (NY)
- Rep. Dave Weldon (FL)
- Rep. Martin Frost (TX)
- Rep. Michael McNulty (NY)
- Rep. Gene Taylor (MS)
- Rep. Bennie Thompson (MS)
- Rep. Albert Wynn (MD)
- Rep. Maurice Hinchey (NY)
- Rep. Charles Rangel (NY)
- Rep. Lee Terry (NE)
20Proponents- Organizational
- Center for Disease Control
- Institute of Medicine
- American Medical Association
- AIDS Project Los Angeles
- AIDS Healthcare Foundation
- Childrens AIDS Fund
- Medical Institute for Sexual Health and Beyond
AIDS
21Interviews
- Jordan Goldes, Press Secretary for Congressman
Gary Ackerman (NY) - History of Ackerman interest
- Early opposition encountered
- Evolution of bill over time
- Write local congressperson to support Ackerman's
proposal - There is no formal opposition that I am aware of
with the Federal bill.
22Interviews
- Craig Stevens, Press Secretary for Congressman
David Weldon of Florida (Proponent) - AIDS awareness prevention top priority
-
- Strives to ensure that bill passes in HOR
- As an MD, aware of bills importance
23Interviews
- Jessie Grudegary, AHF CA State Lobbyist
- AHF would never support "mandatory testing
- OK with universal standard of care inform
mothers/test willingly - No child should be born HIV
- Researching into Federal Bill
24Interviews (Cont.)
- Rosa Peña, Bilingual Case Manager, AIDS Project
LA (Proponent) - Bill would increase likelihood of early Tx
- APLA supports bill
- Wouldnt you want to be aware of your status,
if you knew that you could have an impact on your
babies health?
25Interview Denial
- AIDS Legal Referral Panel
- Exec. Director Bill Hirsh unable to address
questions regarding bill - Noteworthy national org. uninformed or unwilling
to take a stance
26Opponents
- NO organized opposition to federal bill
- Possible opponents
- groups opposing government intrusion into private
lives - groups against federal control on issues
traditionally dealt via state/local government
27Opponents (Cont.)
- Opponents to NY bill
- HIV Law Project (Reproductive Rights Program)
- Chris Cynn, Coordinator for the Reproductive
Rights Program - BODY POSITIVE MAGAZINE article (Jan. 1999)
- oppose NY mandatory testing
- Programs such as New Yorks are coercive and
displace prevention efforts for women.
28Opponents (Cont.)
- Center for Women Policy Studies
- Leslie Wolfe, President of Center for Women
Policy Studies - (THE FEDERALIST) article against bill
(www.thirteen.org/federalist/opinion-hiv.html) - Grave threat to womens right to privacy and to
their reproductive rights.
29Opponents (Cont.)
- Op/ed in New York Times (5/15/98, p. A28)
- Some New York state physicians complain that
reporting of the test results have been
significantly delayed beyond the 72-hour
notification deadline, because of lab delays or
the result of hospital actions.
30Recent Efforts
- Not likely to reach a vote in this session of
Congress - Anticipate strong push in January when Congress
resumes
31Recommendations
- What needs to be done
- Push issue into prominence
- More analysis of cost issues, lower costs if
possible - Promote awareness, lower barriers to care
- Clarify issues of confidentiality versus anonymity
32Policy Recommendation
- YES, we recommend this federal bill pass in its
current form!
33