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Mock hearing on HIV/AIDS held in Beijing

www.chinanews.cn 2005-11-27 17:23:37

(Source: CRIENGLISH.com)

Nov. 27 - A mock hearing on HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment was held
Saturday at Tsinghua University in Beijing.
The hearing was the second of its kind, first initiated by Chinese legal
experts in 2002.
The hearing focused on the legitimacy of compulsory HIV tests on patients
before operations, availability of clean syringes, and detoxification
therapies provided by the government for drug addicts.
Sixteen people participated in the debate, including a person with HIV, a
doctor and a policeman.
Professor Li Dun, who organized the two hearings, said the second was
different because officials and lawmakers did not chair the hearing, and
the conclusion of the proceedings will be briefed to the State Council
and the Ministry of Health.
Ethicist Wang Ruotao argued that people should only take HIV tests when
they donate their blood or organs, while Doctor Xu Lianzhi said patients
should be encouraged to test as long as they are adequately informed
about the test and its ramifications.
At present, patients have to pay for the HIV test before operations in
case of potential medical disputes, including infection of the virus to
doctors via blood.
Meanwhile, Wu Zunyou, a researcher on AIDS prevention, claimed drug
addicts should be allowed to use clean syringes and methadone, a safer
and more-controlled alternative to heroin, which would help curb the
spread of the disease and drug-related crimes.
However, Professor Qiu Zeqi with Peking University noted the move would
not help address the root causes of HIV/AIDS, saying it is a sign of
appeasement on drug abuse.

          ��Special prisons for HIV/AIDS inmates
          ��Anti-AIDS campaign launched
          ��2,700 AIDS patients benefited from Chinese medicine therapy

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