The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

REP. PRICE SAYS SHE DOES NOT WANT HIV QUARANTINE

Ga. lawmaker: Query about quarantine ‘taken out of context.’

- By Ariel Hart ahart@ajc.com

Georgia Rep. Betty Price, in a statement to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on on Saturday, said her comments on people with HIV that ignited a national firestorm this week were “taken completely out of context.”

Price, the wife of former U.S. Health Secretary Tom Price, was in a study committee Tuesday when she asked a state health official whether people with HIV could legally be quarantine­d.

Price said she was just being “provocativ­e.” She said she is not in favor of a quarantine but made the “rhetorical” statement because she was sad and troubled that “too many of our fellow citizens who have HIV are not compliant.”

The health official had presented on the miserable position of Georgia among states combating HIV: Georgia is second only to Louisiana in the rate of new infections. Part of the reason is that more than a third of Georgians with HIV are not receiving care for it.

That is what sparked Price’s comments, she said Saturday.

“And I don’t want to say the quarantine word, but I guess I just said it,” Price said in the meeting. “Is there an ability, since I would guess that public dollars are expended heavily in prophylaxi­s and treatment of this condition?

“So we have a public interest in curtailing the spread. What would you advise or are there any methods legally that we could do that would curtail the spread?”

Price added, “It seems to me it’s almost frightenin­g, the number of people who are living that are potentiall­y carriers. Well they are carriers, with the potential to spread, whereas in the past they died more readily and then at that point they are not posing a risk. So we’ve got a huge population posing a risk if they are not in treatment.”

It’s not a surprise that Price spoke up. Another speaker who set the stage for her comments, Dr. Wendy Armstrong, an Emory professor, director of Grady Health System’s infectious disease program and immediate past chair of the HIV Medicine Associatio­n, had called the panel to action.

“We have significan­t challenges with stigma, with homophobia, with less access to health insurance,” Armstrong said at the beginning of the study committee meeting that morning. “We need to start treating our way out of this disease.”

Armstrong reported that the epidemic had moved into a “more vulnerable” population, including African-American men and young people, and that it was concentrat­ed in the South. About a third spread infection without knowing they were infected, she said, and the others were not getting continuous medication.

“We must facilitate testing,” Armstrong told the panel. “Which requires education. It requires decreasing stigma – people are afraid to get tested because then it puts that red H on their chest for the rest of their life. And it requires linking people to care.”

Price said she, too, was dedicated to ensuring that Georgians receive and adhere to a proper regimen of care, and she wanted to “light a fire” to get it done.

 ??  ?? Georgia Rep. Betty Price’s comments on people with HIV ignited a national firestorm.
Georgia Rep. Betty Price’s comments on people with HIV ignited a national firestorm.
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