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The impact of criminalization of HIV non‐disclosure on the healthcare engagement of women living with HIV in Canada: a comprehensive review of the evidence

机译:在加拿大将未公开艾滋病毒定为犯罪对艾滋病毒携带者的医疗保健的影响:证据的全面审查

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Introduction In 2012, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that people living with HIV (PLWH) must disclose their HIV status to sexual partners prior to sexual activity that poses a “realistic possibility” of HIV transmission for consent to sex to be valid. The Supreme Court deemed that the duty to disclose could be averted if a person living with HIV both uses a condom and has a low plasma HIV‐1 RNA viral load during vaginal sex. This is one of the strictest legal standards criminalizing HIV non‐disclosure worldwide and has resulted in a high rate of prosecutions of PLWH in Canada. Public health advocates argue that the overly broad use of the criminal law against PLWH undermines efforts to engage individuals in healthcare and complicates gendered barriers to linkage and retention in care experienced by women living with HIV (WLWH). Methods We conducted a comprehensive review of peer‐reviewed and non‐peer‐reviewed evidence published between 1998 and 2015 evaluating the impact of the criminalization of HIV non‐disclosure on healthcare engagement of WLWH in Canada across key stages of the cascade of HIV care, specifically: HIV testing and diagnosis, linkage and retention in care, and adherence to antiretroviral therapy. Where available, evidence pertaining specifically to women was examined. Where these data were lacking, evidence relating to all PLWH in Canada or other international jurisdictions were included. Results and discussion Evidence suggests that criminalization of HIV non‐disclosure may create barriers to engagement and retention within the cascade of HIV care for PLWH in Canada, discouraging access to HIV testing for some people due to fears of legal implications following a positive diagnosis, and compromising linkage and retention in healthcare through concerns of exposure of confidential medical information. There is a lack of published empirical evidence focused specifically on women, which is a concern given the growing population of WLWH in Canada, among whom marginalized and vulnerable women are overrepresented. Conclusions The threat of HIV non‐disclosure prosecution combined with a heightened perception of surveillance may alter the environment within which women engage with healthcare services. Fully exploring the extent to which HIV criminalization represents a barrier to the healthcare engagement of WLWH is a public health priority.
机译:引言2012年,加拿大最高法院裁定,艾滋病毒携带者(PLWH)必须在进行性活动之前向性伴侣披露其艾滋病毒状况,这可能构成艾滋病毒传播的“现实可能性”,以使性许可有效。最高法院认为,如果感染艾滋病毒的人在阴道性交时既使用避孕套又具有较低的血浆HIV-1 RNA病毒载量,则可以避免公开信息的义务。这是在世界范围内将未披露HIV行为定为犯罪的最严格的法律标准之一,并导致加拿大对PLWH的起诉率很高。公共卫生倡导者认为,针对PLWH的刑法的广泛使用破坏了使个人参与医疗保健的努力,并使感染HIV的妇女(WLWH)经历的在建立联系和保持护理方面的性别障碍变得更加复杂。方法我们对1998年至2015年期间发表的同行评审和非同行评审的证据进行了全面回顾,评估了在HIV保健服务的各个关键阶段,未公开HIV犯罪定罪对WLWH在加拿大从事医疗保健活动的影响,特别是:艾滋病毒的检测和诊断,联系和保留,以及坚持抗逆转录病毒疗法。在可获得的情况下,检查了专门针对女性的证据。在缺乏这些数据的地方,包括了与加拿大或其他国际管辖区的所有艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染者有关的证据。结果与讨论证据表明,将未披露艾滋病毒定为刑事犯罪可能会给在加拿大的艾滋病毒/艾滋病感染分级服务中参与和保留艾滋病病毒提供障碍,由于担心阳性诊断后对法律的影响,某些人无法进行艾滋病毒检测,并且通过担心泄露机密医疗信息来损害医疗保健中的联系和保留。缺乏专门针对妇女的已公开经验证据,这是一个令人关注的问题,因为加拿大的WLWH人口不断增长,其中边缘化和脆弱妇女所占比例过高。结论HIV未公开起诉的威胁加上对监视的高度认识可能会改变女性从事医疗服务的环境。充分探索将艾滋病毒定为犯罪行为对WLWH从事医疗保健的障碍的程度是公共卫生的优先事项。

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