T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
396.1 | Another "no" vote | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Mon Jul 20 1987 12:35 | 13 |
| Last fall, my hair was falling out (I got a severe dose of alopecia
-- medical Latin for "your hair fell out") and, in the midst of other
tests, I asked my doctor about an Aids test.
He asked me if I was in a high-risk group. I said I wasn't.
He said, don't bother.
If I felt I was at risk (or if I were starting a committed relationship
and we felt this was appropriate), I'd go to one of the anonymous
testing services, possibly out-of-state.
Martin.
|
396.3 | Not knowing is painful! | JUNIOR::TASSONE | July 30th - 1 year Anniv | Mon Jul 20 1987 15:12 | 24 |
| I'm curious about this. Just having read the article in 334 (I
think), the date 1977 comes in here several times (i.e. gay men
remaining celebate since 1977...)
Is that when AIDS was first discovered? I wasn't sexually active
BEFORE 1977 but I became sexually active in 1979 and like many others,
I've had several partners. My SO was sexually active, too, and
right now, we are in the "low risk" group for AIDS.
But, it still makes me wonder: could we both be carrying this inside
us for 10 or so years? Don't Americans (or anyone for that matter)
have a right to know about what's happening to their bodies? I'm
not saying that the test should be free. I'm saying that it shouldn't
be for "people at high risk" ONLY.
I'm sort of feeling bad right now because or my so-called "freedoms
of expression" during my college years. Yes, I've found a wonderful,
healthy man who has never used drugs and isn't homosexual and has
never had a blood transfusion but this doesn't say squat! I do
not use drugs (intravenous), am not homosexual and have never had
a blood transfusion either. But, I cannot honestly say that my
sex partners of years gone by were totally healthy. I can't really
know, can I?
|
396.4 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Mon Jul 20 1987 18:51 | 15 |
| The problem is that you could face serious problems FINANCIALLY
which are entirely unrelated to whether or not you have the disease.
For ex: say I am one of the 20% who get a positive on the first
test. Even though I get a negative on the second round, I could
be uninsurable: no health, no life. So what happens when I get
appendicitis next month????
Zappo. All for the "peace of mind" of thinking I had it, and then
thinking I didn't, and getting scrod because someone leaked the
results to the wrong people.
I won't get tested until I fall into a high-risk category, or the
test can be done BY ME in MY HOME.
Lee
|
396.5 | Free testing? Donate blood | YODA::HOPKINS | | Tue Jul 21 1987 12:12 | 8 |
| If you donate blood they automatically test all blood now. I donate
blood at Childrens Hospital and questioned them about testing.
They said unless you're in the high-risk group they don't suggest
it. I was concerned because I've had 2 previous blood transfusions.
As long as I keep donating blood, my blood will be tested for AIDS
every 8 weeks. So...if what you want is a free test, donate a pint.
BUT...as stated in previous notes, some have tested a false positive.
|
396.6 | | LDP::SCHNEIDER | | Tue Jul 21 1987 14:03 | 9 |
| .5 has a good point, and I'm delighted myself with all the nifty
testing that gets done to my donated blood; but, I suspect there
is no confidentiality that way.
Of course, if you seriously think you're at risk of AIDS exposure,
donating blood is absolutely NOT the way to get tested - the tests
are subject to false negative results, too.
Chuck
|
396.7 | | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | Truth is Beauty, Beauty is Truth | Tue Jul 21 1987 15:44 | 13 |
|
I too, have donated blood for the free testing that is done and
will do so as often as I can in the future. The way the system
is designed, from the material I received, if there is anything
wrong with your blood your name gets put on the list that gets
checked when they process blood for future donations to be checked
again BUT they do not give the reason for the name being on the
list.
_peggy
(-)
|
|
396.8 | | BAGELS::LANE | We're on a road to nowhere | Thu Jul 23 1987 17:40 | 9 |
| From what I have heard they do test your blood when you give a
donation, if you test positive they get rid of your blood, but
they don't tell you that you tested positive. So you may donate
all the time and they would just be throwing out your blood and
you would never know. Please correct me if I'm wrong. This
seems like a waste of time for both you and the Red Cross, I
don't understand why they wouldn't notify you???
Debbi
|
396.9 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Thu Jul 23 1987 18:32 | 7 |
| Re: .8
The Red Cross claims, in the brochure they insist you read before
donating, that they WILL notify you privately if they detect anything
wrong with the blood, including a positive test for HIV (AIDS)
antibodies.
Steve
|
396.10 | Positive? So what?? | CHOWDR::EDECK | | Fri Jul 24 1987 14:05 | 21 |
|
Coupla things--
Currently the test centers are overloaded with samples, which may
be why MDs are recommending that people not at risk not be tested.
A positive test does not indicate that you have AIDS, just the anti-
bodies to AIDS. Estimates of the chances of getting AIDS if you
have the antibodies run between 30 and 100%.
The chances of showing a false positive are about 20%, so the test
is repeated 3 times on the same sample. If it's consistantly positive,
a second type of test is done on the same sample. According to the
Mass. Comunicatable Disease people (or whatever agency it is), the
percent of false positives can be expected to rise as more people
get tested, because more testing will have to be done by outside
labs, which sometimes tend to get sloppy about sample handling.
Good (hot) Weekend, y'all!
E.
|
396.11 | | YODA::HOPKINS | | Fri Jul 24 1987 15:52 | 6 |
| re: 396.7
I'm not sure what the Red Cross does but at Childrens they test
the blood and if they find a problem, they notify you right away.
Whether it be AIDS or anything else.
|
396.12 | Caution... | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Fri Jul 24 1987 18:40 | 10 |
| I'm concerned about the confidentiality of AIDS tests. A friend
who's been writing applications for an insurance company says
that the insurance industry shares a database detailing claims made
by each person (similar to a credit bureau). If I got an AIDS test,
I would not have it done in my doctor's office (it would end up
in my insurance file). Rather, I'd go to an anonymous testing place
and pay in cash.
Liz
|
396.13 | Anonymous AIDS testing | CSC32::JOHNS | My chocolate, all mine! | Mon Jul 27 1987 19:05 | 4 |
| In Colorado, there apparently IS no anonymous testing place at the
moment. I would have it done out of state.
Carol
|
396.14 | Use assumed name | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Mon Jul 27 1987 21:41 | 7 |
| RE .13:
What you can always do is to go to a clinic or health department
and give a false name and address and pay cash.
Elizabeth
|
396.15 | | LDP::SCHNEIDER | | Tue Jul 28 1987 08:41 | 6 |
| Good practical suggestion, Elizabeth; it goes to show the harm that
will come from a lack of truly confidential testing: people at risk
for AIDS will be driven 'underground', and the epidemiological (right
word?) data base gets corrupted.
Chuck
|
396.16 | confidential database is an oxymoron | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Noto, Ergo Sum | Tue Jul 28 1987 08:58 | 6 |
| RE .15 Don't know about you, but I don't like the idea of a
database. High risk or not, a lot of people are worried that
"just possibly maybe" they've been exposed, but value their
privacy more than certainty. As Lee said in .4 a home test
would be the only way to be SURE of confidentiality. How diff-
icult would it be ?
|
396.17 | Soon | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Tue Jul 28 1987 11:28 | 11 |
| According to the 5 hour Aids show last Friday (generally boring -- I
have a tape if anyone's interested), mail-in kits are on their way.
(You buy the kit for $14.95, get blood into the sample tubes, and
mail it off to the lab. A week later, you call and give the code number.
Better tests (that check for presence of the virus) will probably
be on the market by the end of the year. These will be completely
do-it-yourself.
Martin.
|
396.18 | | BEES::PARE | | Fri Aug 07 1987 14:28 | 2 |
| I see a lot of disadvantages to being tested for AIDS,... can anyone
think of any advantages? I can't.
|
396.19 | | CALLME::MR_TOPAZ | | Fri Aug 07 1987 14:53 | 9 |
| re .18:
Yup, I can think of one: knowing whether or not you risk transmitting
the virus to someone else (in particular, someone whom you care for
enough to have sex with).
Don't you care about that?
--Mr Topaz
|
396.20 | Nope. Not a clear benefit | AITG::SHUBIN | Time for a little something... | Fri Aug 07 1987 15:41 | 11 |
| re: positive reasons for AIDS testing
A positive AIDS-test result isn't proof that "you risk transmitting the
virus" (396.19), it's proof that you've been exposed to the virus. You
may or may not have it.
As discussed previously, there's a lot of negative stigma and negative
feelings (from oneself and from others) from a positive result, so even
this reason isn't a clear benefit.
-- hs
|
396.21 | | COLORS::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Fri Aug 07 1987 17:57 | 5 |
| If you always engage in safer sex, you will probably not transmit the virus and
you will probably not become infected. You shouldn't need a test to
decide to do this. If you only think you have to "be safe" if you are
antibody-positive, you are making a big mistake. AIDS is too important
to fall into the trap of making it someone else's responsibility.
|
396.22 | implicit testing | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Fri Aug 07 1987 18:07 | 19 |
| Re: .19
As Hal has pointed out, testing positive is not proof you have AIDS,
it's not really even proof you've been exposed as there are significant
numbers of false positives. Furthermore, testing negative is not
proof you have not been exposed or are not carrying. Besides the
false negatives, AIDS has a long incubation time. You may be carrying
the virus, but not have developed antibodies to it yet.
I can think of a "reason to be tested", if you donate blood, your
blood is tested for HIV as well as a whole slew of other things,
and if you test positive they will tell you. I plan on continuing
to donate blood, so everytime I do so, I'm being tested for AIDS.
The claim is that results are confidential, but given the hysteria
surrounding AIDS, even if that is true now it may not be so forever.
Note that this isn't a "reason to be tested" per se, but if you
donate blood you *are* being tested, so...
-- Charles
|
396.24 | | MOSAIC::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Mon Aug 10 1987 12:14 | 19 |
| >> I suggest that if
you have had a contact that you have the least doubt about, you
*owe* it to those you come into intimate contact with to be tested.
I suggest that you *owe* it to those you come into intimate contact with
to alway practice safer sex. This, not the test, will protect your
loved ones and society.
>> there are moments in each life when the interests of self must be
>> subordinated to our duties to society. Perhaps this idea is no longer
>> fashionable. It has not, in my opinion, ceased to be morally correct.
In that case, I trust you are one of those heterosexuals you consider it
a moral duty to society to always practice safer sex and to educate
others to do the same at all times. So many folks have a hard time
giving up the personal pleasures they are used to, and want to make
*someone else* do it. They use the idea of The Test as a false litmus
to decide who has to be socially responsible and who does not...
|
396.25 | Portsmouth NH | CSMADM::WATKINS | | Thu Aug 13 1987 17:46 | 19 |
|
I recently asked the same question in the Human relations file.
If this note interests you, you might want to look into what those
noters had to say.
A friend of mine went to a place called the Feminist Health Ctr
in Portsmouth NH for testing. They do AIDS and all other STD's
confidentially by issuing a number to you. I *think* he said you
never even give your name. That might be a good place for people
concerned with confidentiality.
I would most definitely want to know, despite the trauma it would
wreak on your life. If I were married or had children, I'd want
to know so I could be more careful not to infect them (if they already
weren't.) There is a case for "always being careful" but if you
knew you had been exposed, I think you might just go that extra
mile to "make sure."
Stacie
|
396.26 | El Paso County, Aids and Brazil. | NEXUS::MORGAN | Tis an ill wind that blows no minds. | Sat Aug 15 1987 18:30 | 19 |
| Yesterday I called the El Paso County health service to make
arrangements for a free aids test. After getting to the right person I
was told it would take 3 months or so to get around to the test. Then
the person asked me why I wanted to be tested. I told him that I had a
sexual relationship with a women who I suspected had previous sexual
relationships with soldiers from Fort Carson. I was told that as long
as I didn't share needles (Yech!) with the woman or engage in
unprotected anal sex with her I was at no risk. Neither of which I did.
Now my question is "Do I get tested anyway?" How far should this
paranoia go?
Incidently, on NPR yesterday was a segment on AIDS in Brazil.
Apparently over 1,000,000 people have aids there through hetrosexual
activities. This is thought to arise because of the rampant use of
unprotected anal intercourse (which preserves the womans virginity).
I guess the answer is to ALWAYS use safe sex. But that's a drag when I
know the woman can't get pregnet and that I am/was in no risk.
|
396.27 | AIDS testing - impact+ | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Mon Aug 17 1987 14:11 | 11 |
| I heard a report on my TV-cable news that recently, 35 people in the
San Francisco area who tested positive for the AIDS virus were tracked.
7 committed suicide - and as it turned out during and postmortem, one
of them didn't even have the virus: the test had been incorrectly
performed.
and now they want to sell a test kit through the mail? For something
with the potential impact of knowing YOU CARRY THE VIRUS? Yow!
|
396.28 | Misinformation Alert | TSG::BRADY | No good deed goes unpunished... | Tue Aug 18 1987 13:01 | 17 |
| re: .-2
>I was told that as long
>as I didn't share needles (Yech!) with the woman or engage in
>unprotected anal sex with her I was at no risk. Neither of which I did.
This is completely bogus information. *Any* sexual practice with
the potential for direct contact between the blood/semen/vaginal secretions
of one partner and the bloodstream of another is an opportunity for the
virus to be transmitted to that bloodstream. Given the potential for
chafing, etc. this includes ALL forms of intercourse. Given the frequent
presence of small (often unnoticed) cuts/scrapes within the mouth, this
extends to oral sex as well-either variety, the risk being mostly to the
'giver'.
I'm amazed you received such misinformation from public health
staffers.
|
396.29 | | ANGORA::BUSHEE | George Bushee | Tue Aug 18 1987 14:23 | 7 |
|
RE: .-1
I just watched a show on one of the PBS stations on aids and
the current thought among the researchers is that AIDS is not
transmitted by oral sex. On the other hand, do they really know
yet?
|
396.30 | | RAINBO::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Tue Aug 18 1987 14:38 | 10 |
| There have been some studies done lately which seem to indicate
that oral sex is a pretty low-risk vector. I do not think anyone can
make a categorical statement that the virus is definitely not
transmitted this way, only that it seems to be low risk. It should be
pointed out that at the time two articles were written "proving" minimal
risk, another was published coming to the opposite conclusion. There
are lots of ways to read data, as I'm sure we all know.
Incidentally, these studies primarily reply to oral sex involving men,
not women.
|