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LV426
04-20-2004, 04:43 PM
Teachers Can Force Students to Take HIV Tests (http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,117370,00.htm l)

Friday, April 16, 2004

MADISON, Wis. — Gov. Jim Doyle signed first-of-its-kind legislation Friday that requires students to get tested for HIV if teachers think they were exposed to contaminated blood.



Privacy advocates say the law infringes on students' medical privacy and could lead to discrimination against gays. Simon Davies, director of Privacy International, called the law "a wild exaggeration" of HIV fears.

"It's appalling," Davies said. "My first reaction was it can play to the worst ignorance and bigotry of people."

Republican Sen. Carol Roessler introduced the bill after a student at an Oshkosh alternative school cut his hand on a window and splattered blood in a teacher's eye in 2001.

The teacher asked the student to submit to a blood test, but his parents refused, said Bob Geigle, director of pupil services for the Oshkosh (search) Area School District. The teacher, who ultimately tested negative for HIV, had to get a court order for the student to get tested.

Geigle said the law is a necessary precaution for teachers, who too often face violence or emergencies.

"They are front line personnel, so to speak," Geigle said. "They're as likely as first responders to come into contact with someone who is HIV infected."

But Davies said the circumstances in which a teacher might be infected with HIV from a student's blood are so "exceptional, they're almost nonexistent."

The law is the first of its kind in the country to specifically list school district employees in the same class as emergency workers who, in many states, can make people take blood tests if they think they have had contact with contaminated blood, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Wisconsin law allows emergency personnel such as firefighters and prison guards to force someone to submit to an HIV test if the worker is significantly exposed to that person's blood.

The workers must have taken precautions against exposure, must get a doctor's written proof that they were significantly exposed and have an HIV test themselves before they can force someone to take a test. The new law makes teachers subject to the same criteria as other emergency workers.

WhiteCrowUK
04-20-2004, 05:25 PM
When I was training as a teacher a few years ago in England - I saw a kind of human face to this.

I was working at an inner city school, and one of the kids, a boy was HIV positive. This meant that he had to be kept separate from other kids for most social events such as sports and wasnt allowed into school discos etc.

It is one of those things which has stuck with me. Although it would be horrific for him to pass it on through any accident, it was also somewhat sad the way the boy had to be treated in the manner of the 1990s leper.

[I dont know if this was a widespread practice and is still in place these days]