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Note: NOW-NJ
President Maretta Short is quoted in this article. Similar
articles were published in over 50 newspapers around the
country, and Maretta was quoted in most of them.

New Jersey Targets HIV Transmissions
By TOM HESTER Jr., AP Newswire
TRENTON, N.J.
(AP) — HIV testing will soon become part of routine prenatal
care and be required for some newborns in New Jersey under a new
law that supporters say is putting the state in the forefront of
the national fight against HIV transmission to babies.
Acting Gov. Richard J. Codey signed the measure into law
Wednesday at University Hospital in Newark. The law will
take effect in six months.
"We can significantly reduce the number of infections to
newborns and help break down the stigma associated with the
disease," Codey said. "For newborns, early detection can
be the ultimate lifesaving measure."
Codey, the acting governor while Gov. Jon S. Corzine is out of
the country this week for the holidays, sponsored the bill as
the Senate president.
The bill allows women to opt out of the HIV testing, but critics
contend the screening will deprive women of their right to make
medical decisions.
According to the Kaiser Foundation, a nonprofit research
organization focusing on U.S. health care, New Jersey is the
first state to push HIV testing for both pregnant women and
newborns.
Arkansas, Michigan, Tennessee and Texas require health care
providers to test a mother for HIV, unless the mother asks not
to be tested, while Connecticut, Illinois and New York test all
newborns for HIV, according to the foundation.
New Jersey has required providers only to offer HIV testing to
pregnant women. Under the new law, HIV testing will be part of
routine prenatal care for all pregnant women, and doctors will
provide pregnant woman with information about HIV and AIDS.
It also requires newborns to be tested when the mother has
tested positive or her HIV status is unknown.
Riki E. Jacobs, executive director of the Hyacinth AIDS
Foundation in New Brunswick, the state's largest AIDS service
agency, said the law won't help the women who don't get prenatal
care.
"We need to focus on getting people into care and keeping them
in care," Jacobs said. "That is our most potent prevention
weapon."
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has
recommended all pregnant women be tested for HIV, though it has
said testing should be voluntary. The CDC also found
medical intervention during pregnancy can cut mother-to-child
HIV transmission from 25 percent to 2 percent.
New Jersey has about 17,600 AIDS cases, according to the Kaiser
Foundation. Women represent 32.4 percent of the cases —
the third highest rate in the nation. The national average
is 23.4 percent.
The state has about 115,000 births per year and had seven
infants born with HIV in 2005, according to state health
department officials.
The American Civil Liberties Union and some women's groups
contend the bill deprives women of authority to make medical
decisions.
"Women's privacy rights and choices are as constitutionally
valid as any other citizen, regardless of reproductive status,"
said Maretta J. Short, New Jersey's National Organization of
Women president. |