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HIV Prevention Act of 1997 : ウィキペディア英語版 | HIV Prevention Act of 1997
The HIV Prevention Act of 1997 was proposed U.S. legislation that was not acted on by either house of Congress. The bill would have brought policy towards HIV/AIDS, often referred to as 'AIDS exceptionalism', in line with the public health approach used for other infectious diseases. It would have established confidential HIV reporting and partner notification nationwide, required accused sex offenders to be tested for HIV, and allow health-care providers to test for HIV before exposing their employees in the course of an invasive medical procedure. It recommended that States enact laws providing that intentionally infecting others with HIV is a felony. The bill was endorsed by the ''American Medical News''. ==Legislative history== Representative Thomas Coburn (R-Oklahoma) introduced it in the House on March 13, 1997, and Senator Don Nickles (R-Oklahoma) introduced it in the Senate. The legislation was referred to the House Committee on Commerce on March 13, 1997, and to its Subcommittee on Health and Environment on March 21, 1997. No further action was taken in either chamber.〔(Bill Summary & Status - 105th Congress (1997 - 1998) - H.R.1062 - All Congressional Actions - THOMAS (Library of Congress) )〕 The Senate referred the legislation to the Committee on Labor and Human Resources. Coburn had introduced similar legislation the year before with similar results. on March 21, 1997. It would have amended the Public Health Service Act to promote activities for the prevention of additional cases of infection HIV. It too was referred to committee and never acted upon.
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