Press room ... 2000 archive
Project Inform Opposes Newborn Testing Provision
in Ryan White CARE Act Reauthorization Bill
August 8, 2000
San Francisco, CA—Project Inform is urging Congress
to reject a provision in legislation approved by the House of Representatives
(H.R. 4807) that provides financial incentives for states to require
mandatory HIV testing of newborns. The provision is part of legislation
that reauthorizes the Ryan White CARE Act, a federal program that
provides critical health care and treatment services for people
living with HIV/AIDS. The House and the Senate have both passed
their respective versions of this legislation and the Senate version
does not contain this provision. A joint House/Senate conference
committee will convene in September to work out differences between
the two bills.
"We strongly support reauthorization of the Ryan White CARE Act
this year," said Ryan Clary, Community Organizing Program Manager.
"However, mandatory HIV testing of pregnant women and/or newborns
is unnecessary and has historically deterred some women from accessing
proper care and treatment. We support funding for non-coercive programs
that improve the care and treatment of HIV-positive pregnant women
and that reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV. We call on
Congress to remove the House provision from the final bill."
The House provision would add an additional $20 million to the
$10 million currently authorized in the CARE Act for states to establish
programs to reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV. The current
CARE Act language allows funds to be spent on programs such as voluntary
testing, counseling, and treatment along with the implementation
of mandatory testing programs, but takes a neutral attitude, neither
rewarding nor discouraging mandatory testing. The proposed revisions
gradually implement incentives that would provide more funding for
states that impose mandatory testing. By the 4th year of the proposed
reauthorized CARE Act, 75% of the additional $20 million would go
only to states with mandatory testing programs.
"Voluntary HIV testing with adequate counseling has already been
shown to be an extremely effective means of reducing mother-to-child
transmission," said Angela Garcia, Program Manager of Project WISE,
Project Inform's treatment information and advocacy program for
women. "When offered a voluntary HIV test with appropriate counseling,
pregnant women overwhelmingly choose to test. In contrast, mandatory
testing discourages many women from testing. It is unnecessary and
a barrier in a woman's right to be involved in her own healthcare
decisions and those of her child."
During Congress' August recess, Project Inform will work with other
advocates opposing the mandatory testing provision. It will also
mobilize its Treatment Action Network, encouraging grassroots constituents
around the country to contact their elected officials in support
of CARE act reauthorization without the mandatory testing provision.
All information is available free of charge; donations are strongly
encouraged. For more information, contact the Project Inform National
HIV/AIDS Treatment Hotline