http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2001/5/2/213417.shtml
Mandatory AIDS Test 'Law Does Work'
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, May 3,
2001
CHICAGO (UPI) - Mandatory
testing for AIDS identifies pregnant women who are unaware they are carrying
the disease, allowing prenatal therapy to prevent infection of the newborn,
researchers said Wednesday.
"I was opposed to the law that requires
testing," said Dr. Urania Magriples, associate professor of obstetrics and
gynecology at Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Conn. "But
the law does work."
At the annual meeting of the American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), researchers said the
Connecticut law requiring prenatal testing of mothers, or post-delivery testing
of newborns, has led to almost universal testing for a pregnant woman's HIV
status. Infection by the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, leads to AIDS in
people.
Magriples said the law, which went into
effect in October 1999, coerced women into allowing the tests to be performed.
But her study at Yale found that before the study less than 40 percent of women
underwent testing and after the law more than 95 percent of women allowed
themselves to be tested.
In a study conducted at Stamford Hospital in
Connecticut, Dr. William Cusick, assistant clinical professor of obstetrics and
gynecology at Columbia University in New York, said mandatory testing uncovered
seven pregnant women who were apparently unaware they had HIV. Those women were
started immediately on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), a
combination of anti-HIV drugs, and all delivered babies that were free of
disease and continued to be free of the virus a year later. More than 2,300
children were born at the hospital during the period of the study, October 1999
to July 2000.
The testing also led to the discovery that
two other persons - a child and the spouse of one of the infected women - were
also infected. Treatment for them also was started.
Based on a natural history of the disease in
which about 30 percent of babies of infected mothers carry the virus from
birth, Cusick estimated that mandatory testing saved two babies from becoming
infected at his hospital, which includes children from Fairfield County in
Connecticut and parts of Westchester County in New York.
"Being able to save one child in nine
months is worth it, I think," Cusick said. "There are few times in
medicine you can prevent a lethal disease."
He said that when women are told that they
must submit to the testing, except for religious grounds, most of them do not
object.
Magriples concurred. Very few women signed a
form refusing to allow the testing, she said. Among those who originally
refused (about 10 percent of the total), half of those women agreed to testing
when counseled later.
"I believe they realized that the tests
were to benefit their child, and that's why they consented," she said. The
nearly universal testing has found about 10 more infected pregnant women that
would have been expected historically, she said. Prior to the testing law,
about 15 pregnant HIV infected women were seen at Yale yearly; since the law,
the staff sees about 25 infected women annually.
ACOG, which represents 40,000 obstetricians
and gynecologists, and the American Academy of Pediatrics, in a 1999 policy
statement, called for universal HIV testing of pregnant women, but did not
support mandatory testing.
Cusick said that Connecticut - the only
state that mandates testing - has led the way in counseling and testing for
HIV, and the studies presented at ACOG show that "a policy of mandatory
HIV prenatal screening is achievable and desirable."
Copyright 2001 by United Press
International.
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