The Standard Journal

Kemp signs bill modernizin­g HIV disclosure laws

- By Rebecca Grapevine This story is available through a news partnershi­p with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educationa­l Foundation.

ATLANTA — Gov. Brian Kemp has signed into law a bill that modernizes some of Georgia’s rules around HIV-status disclosure.

Under the prior law, any person living with HIV who did not disclose positive HIV status prior to a sexual act could face a felony charge punishable by up to 10 years in prison, according to Georgia Equality, an LGBT advocacy group.

The revised law is narrower in scope. Now, Georgia law penalizes only those sexual acts performed by a person living with HIV “with the intent to transmit HIV” when the act “has a significan­t risk of transmissi­on based on current scientific­ally supported levels of risk transmissi­on.”

Such incidents could still be punished as felonies, but the maximum punishment has been reduced to five years.

The bill also excludes punishment when a person living with HIV is forced to perform a sexual act against his or her will, as in cases of sexual assault or rape.

State Sen. Chuck Hufstetler, R-Rome, initially sponsored the bill in the Senate. It was strongly supported by Georgia Rep. Sharon Cooper, RMarietta, the chair of the House Health and Human Services Committee.

The bill passed the Senate with just two “no” votes before clearing the House unanimousl­y.

“The current HIV laws were written in the 1980s,” Hufstetler said Wednesday. “They really didn’t distinguis­h between HIV and AIDS (and) criminaliz­ed hypodermic needles and syringes.

“I’m hoping that laws that align with public health best practices will contribute to better control of individual­s that have obtained (HIV) and also a reduced infection rate. As an anesthesia provider in the medical community, I believe it’s my responsibi­lity to correct these things in laws when I become aware of them,” Hufstetler said.

“As a person living with HIV, I’m encouraged that the (Georgia) legislatur­e understand­s the advances in HIV science,” added Malcolm Reid, coalition co-chair and federal policy chair for People Living with HIV Caucus, in a press release. “Ending the stigma around HIV is a necessity to ending the HIV epidemic.”

The new law will “hopefully will result in fewer conviction­s,” said Catherine Hanssens, the executive director for the Center for HIV Law and Policy in New York.

“At the same time, the law is still HIVspecifi­c, singling out people living with HIV for uniquely negative treatment in a way that other serious and incurable diseases are not … There is still work to be done,” Hanssens added.

The change to Georgia law reflects advances in HIV treatment, especially the developmen­t of drugs that can suppress the amount of virus in the blood, also called the “viral load.”

Drug regimens can effectivel­y suppress the amount of virus in the blood to very low or even undetectab­le levels, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control.

“If you have an undetectab­le viral load, you have effectivel­y no risk of transmitti­ng HIV to an HIV-negative partner through sex,” according to the CDC website. Most people who follow the appropriat­e drug treatments can reach an undetectab­le viral load in just six months, the agency says.

There were 56,466 people living with HIV in Georgia in 2019, according to AIDSVu, an online tracking tool based at Emory University in Atlanta. Of those, about two-thirds, or 33,370, had achieved viral suppressio­n, or very low levels of virus in the blood.

Most Georgia cases were transmitte­d by sexual contact, but around 7% of cases in Georgia are attributab­le to injecting drugs, according to AIDSVu data.

The bill also changes Georgia law so that distributi­ng hypodermic needles or syringes is no longer punishable.

 ?? ?? Sen. Chuck Hufstetler
Sen. Chuck Hufstetler

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