In late June, opt-out HIV testing
was expanded to male inmates entering Cook County Jail, a process in place for
female inmates since April 2011. Health officials plan to adopt a similar
program for state prisons soon, hoping to increase the number of people who
know their HIV status.
The program requires inmates to sign
a form refusing to take the test during intake; otherwise, they will be tested.
Undiagnosed inmates who leave prisons might infect their partners in the
community, said experts.
“It’s a window of opportunity for
reaching them for education purposes,” said Cajetan Luna, executive director of
the Center for Health Justice. “Once people get out in the community, it’s much
harder to do that work.”
According to CDC, each year one in
seven people with HIV pass through a correctional facility. Inmates are more
than twice as likely to have HIV as people in the general population,
particularly inmates who used to engage in injecting drug use, sex work, and
other risk behaviors.
Experts attribute misunderstandings
about HIV and how it is transmitted for inmate reluctance to test, and fear of
unwanted attention dissuades some from seeking treatment. “I try to give them
plausible reasons on why they are seeing me other than they got it,” said Dr.
Chad Zawitz, director of infectious disease for Cook County Jail.
Compared to the previous year, the
number of female inmates getting tested has about tripled since the opt-out
program began, Zawitz said.
In the state prison system, opt-out
testing will be paid for with part of a $7 million grant awarded two years ago
to University of Illinois-Chicago researchers, who are also working to find and
diagnose more HIV infections within inmate social networks.
The Friends of AIDS Foundation is
dedicated to enhancing the quality of life for HIV positive individuals and
empowering people to make healthy choices to prevent the spread of the HIV
virus. To learn more about The Friends of AIDS Foundation, please visit: http://www.friendsofaids.org.
TOGETHER WE REMAIN STRONG!