Saturday, December 12, 2015

Keeping Confidence: HIV & the Criminal Law from HIV Service Providers’ Perspectives

We present qualitative research findings about how perceptions of criminal prosecutions for the transmission of HIV interact with the provision of high-quality HIV health and social care in England and Wales. Seven focus groups were undertaken with a total of 75 diverse professionals working in clinical and community-based services for people with HIV. 

Participants’ understanding of the law in this area was varied, with many knowing the basic requirements for a prosecution, yet lacking confidence in the best way to communicate key details with those using their service. Prosecutions for HIV transmission have influenced, and in some instances, disrupted the provision of HIV services, creating ambivalence and concern among many providers about their new role as providers of legal information. The way that participants approached the topic with service users was influenced by their personal views on individual and shared responsibility for health, their concerns about professional liability and their degree of trust in non-coercive health promotion approaches to managing public health. 

These findings reveal an underlying ambivalence among many providers about how they regard the interface between criminal law, coercion and public health. It is also apparent that in most HIV service environments, meaningful exploration of practical ethical issues is relatively rare. The data presented here will additionally be of use to managers and providers of HIV services in order that they can provide consistent and confident support and advice to people with HIV.

...Understanding the law
Accurate understanding of and ability to communicate about the law are two important and distinct skills for those who inform service users about the criminal law or are expected to field questions on the topic. Many participants had a basic understanding of the conditions that could lead to a prosecution.

I think the important thing is that transmission actually has to take place. So it is not just about unsafe sex - it is about transmission essentially happening. Somebody has to become positive. (Clinical service provider)

However, many participants expressed confusion about the technical legal meaning of recklessness, and what a sufficient defence might be against such a charge. Arriving at a mutually agreed legal definition of reckless grievous bodily harm was far from straightforward, with many participants struggling to find accurate and concise means of distinguishing between common-sense uses of recklessness and this particular form of criminal liability.

So the way I understood it was, that the law is defined into an act and a mental state. And the original law applied to intention, which is to intentionally and to wilfully desire to do it. And it’s kind of flowed out into recklessness, which is sort of omission, or by not caring, or not caring if you transmit. But not taking reasonable precaution, or by not telling people it’s kind of involved wider of what my understanding about what the original law was meant to be? (Community service provider)...

Full article at:   http://goo.gl/HLuD0y

By:   Catherine Dodds, a , * Matthew Weait, b Adam Bourne, a and Siri Egede c
aSigma Research, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
bSchool of Law, Birkbeck College, London, UK
cDepartment of Sociology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
* Corresponding author. Email: ku.ca.mthsl@sddod.enirehtac
 


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