Your Rights - HIV Issues
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New Hampshire Anti-Discrimination Law
Discrimination Based on HIV Status
Does New Hampshire have laws protecting people with HIV from discrimination?
Yes. New Hampshire has enacted anti-discrimination laws protecting people with
HIV from discrimination in employment, housing, and public accommodations.
In addition, there are a number of federal laws that protect people from
discrimination based on their HIV status.
Who is protected under these anti-discrimination laws?
- People with AIDS or who are HIV-positive, even if they are asymptomatic and have no outward or manifest signs of illness.
- People who have a record of or who are regarded or perceived as having HIV.
- Under federal law, but not New Hampshire law, a person who does not have
HIV, but who “associates” with a person with HIV-such as friends, lovers,
spouses, roommates, business associates, advocates, and caregivers of a person
with HIV.
Employment Discrimination
Adverse Treatment
What laws protect people with HIV from discrimination in employment?
People who are HIV-positive or who have AIDS are protected from employment
discrimination under both the New Hampshire Law Against Discrimination (RSA
§ 354-A) and the federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).
Both of these statutes prohibit discrimination in employment on the basis
of a person’s disability.
New Hampshire law covers workplaces with six or more employees while
the ADA covers workplaces with 15 or more employees.
What do these anti-discrimination laws prohibit?
An employer
may not take adverse action against an applicant or employee simply on the
basis that the person has a disability such as HIV or AIDS. This means that
an employer may not terminate, refuse to hire, rehire, or promote, or otherwise
discriminate in the terms or conditions of employment, based on the fact
that a person is HIV-positive or has AIDS.
The focus here is whether a person with AIDS or HIV was treated differently
than other applicants or employees in similar situations.
The following are examples of unlawful discrimination:
- An employer may not refuse to hire a person with HIV based on fear that
HIV will be transmitted to other employees or to customers.
- An employer may not refuse to hire or make an employment decision
based on the possibility, or even probability, that a person will become
sick and will not be able to do the job in the future.
- An employer cannot refuse to hire a person because it will increase health or workers’ compensation insurance premiums.
Reasonable Accomodation
What does it mean that an employer may have to provide a “reasonable accommodation” for an employee with a disability?
Persons with disabilities, such as HIV/AIDS, may experience health-related
problems that make it difficult to meet some job requirements or duties.
For example, a person may be exhausted or fatigued and find it difficult
to work a full-time schedule.
In certain circumstances, the employer has an obligation to modify
or adjust job requirements or workplace policies in order to enable a person
with a disability, such as HIV or AIDS, to perform the job duties. This is
known as a “reasonable accommodation.”
Examples of reasonable accommodations include:
- Modifying or changing job tasks or responsibilities
- Establishing a part-time or modified work schedule
- Permitting time off during regular work hours for medical appointments
- Reassigning an employee to a vacant job
- Making modifications to the physical layout of a job site or acquiring
devices such as a telephone amplifier to allow, for example, a person with
a hearing impairment to do the job.
How can a person get a reasonable accommodation?
It is, with rare exception, the employee’s responsibility to initiate
the request for an accommodation. In addition, an employer may request that
an employee provide some information about the nature of the disability.
Employees with concerns about disclosing HIV/AIDS status to a supervisor
should contact the AIDS Law Project’s Legal InfoLine in order
to strategize about ways to address any such requests.
There is no fixed set of accommodations that an employee may request.
The nature of a requested accommodation will depend on the particular needs
of an individual employee’s circumstances.
Does an employer have to grant a request for a reasonable accommodation?
An employer is not obligated to grant each and every request for an
accommodation. An employer does not have to grant a reasonable accommodation
that will create an “undue burden” (i.e., significant difficulty or expense
for the employer’s operation). In addition, the employer does not have to
provide a reasonable accommodation if the employee cannot perform the job
function even with the reasonable accommodation.
When is a “reasonable accommodation” for an employee an “undue burden” for an employer?
In determining whether a requested accommodation creates an undue burden
or hardship for an employer, courts examine a number of factors, which include:
- The employer’s size, budget and financial constraints
- The costs of implementing the requested accommodation
- How the accommodation affects or disrupts the employer’s business
Again, each situation is examined on a case-by-case basis.
An employer only has an obligation to grant the reasonable accommodation
if, as a result of the accommodation, the employee is then qualified to perform
the essential job duties. An employer does not have to hire or retain an
employee who cannot perform the essential functions of the job, even with
a reasonable accommodation.
Employer Health Inquiries
What may an employer ask about an employee’s health?
During the application process:
Both
New Hampshire law and the ADA prohibit an employer from asking a job applicant
to submit to a medical exam or answer any medical inquiry until a “conditional”
offer of employment is made.
For example, during the application process, an employer may not ask about:
- Any history of workers’ compensation claims or social security disability benefits.
- Whether you have ever been hospitalized or been under the care of a physician.
- Whether you have ever had any medical problems which would make it difficult for you to do your job.
- An employer MAY, however, ask whether an applicant has the knowledge, skill and ability to perform the job functions.
After a conditional offer of employment:
Under the ADA, after an employer has made an offer of employment, it
may require a medical examination (but not an HIV test) solely for the purpose
of determining whether the employee is capable of performing the essential
functions of the job with reasonable accommodation. There are strict
confidentiality requirements on the storage of this information.
New Hampshire law allows employers, after making an offer of employment,
to inquire into and keep records of existing or pre-existing physical or
mental conditions. RSA § 354-A:7, III.
In addition, if the employer has more than fifteen employees, any medical
exam or inquiry must meet the following requirements of the ADA:
- The employer must require the medical exam or inquiry of all applicants in the job category.
-
The information must be kept strictly confidential. It must be on separate
forms and kept in a segregated file apart from a general personnel file.
-
The information may not be shared with others, with a limited exception for
supervisors or managers who need to be informed of necessary job restrictions
or accommodations, or safety personnel who may be told if the person with
a disability requires emergency treatment.
- The results of the
medical examination cannot be used to withdraw the job offer unless the results
indicate that the individual is not able to perform the essential functions
of the job with reasonable accommodation.
Health Care Workers
How have the courts addressed fears that health care employees who
perform invasive procedures, such as surgeons, will transmit HIV to patients?
The risk of HIV transmission from a health care worker to a patient is
considered so small that it approaches zero. Nevertheless, in cases where
hospitals have sought to restrict or terminate the privileges of HIV-positive
health care workers who perform invasive procedures, courts have reacted
with tremendous fear and have insisted on an impossible “zero risk” standard.
As a result, the small number of courts that have addressed this issue under
the ADA have upheld such terminations.
The employment provisions in the ADA provide that an employee is not
qualified to perform the job if he or she poses a “direct threat to the health
or safety of others.” To determine whether an employee poses a “direct threat,”
a court analyzes:
- The nature, duration and severity of the risk;
- The probability of the risk; and
- Whether the risk can be eliminated by reasonable accommodation.
However, in the case of HIV-positive health care workers, courts
have ignored the extremely remote probability of the risk and focused on
the nature, duration and severity of the risk. The following excerpt from
a recent case is typical of courts’ approach:
“We hold that Dr. Doe does pose a significant risk to the
health and safety of his patients that cannot be eliminated by reasonable
accommodation. Although there may presently be no documented case of surgeon-to-patient
transmission, such transmission clearly is possible. And, the risk of percutaneous
injury can never be eliminated through reasonable accommodation … Thus, even
if Dr. Doe takes extra precautions … some measure of risk will always exist
…” (Doe v. University of Maryland Medical System Corporation, United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, April 3, 1995.)
It is important to note that only a small number of courts
have addressed the rights of HIV-positive health care workers. The AIDS
Law Project believes that these cases have been incorrectly decided and are
inconsistent with the intent of Congress in passing the ADA. Because of
the unsettled nature of the law in this area, a health care worker who is
confronted with potential employment discrimination should consult a lawyer
or public health advocate.
New Hampshire's Harsh Law
New Hampshire has
a particularly harsh statute which on its face prohibits a health care worker
infected with HIV or Hepatitis B from performing what is called an “exposure
prone invasive procedure” without an application seeking permission to do
so from the Commissioner of Health and Human Services. Under the statute,
an expert review panel is appointed to decide whether the health care worker
can continue performing such procedures and, if so, whether any restrictions
will be imposed. RSA § 141-F:9.
It is crucial to understand your rights as a health care worker. For
example, the term “exposure-prone invasive procedure” is problematic and
not adequately defined. Any health care worker should contact GLAD,
another attorney, or a public health advocate, before taking any steps to
notify the Commissioner under this statute.
Assessing Discrimination
How does an employee determine whether he or she has experienced discrimination?
While it may be useful to consult with a lawyer, the following steps can
be helpful in beginning to consider and assess a potential employment discrimination
problem.
- Consider the difference between unfairness and illegal discrimination.
The bottom line of employment law is that an employee can be fired for a
good reason, bad reason, or no reason at all. A person can be legally fired
for a lot of reasons, including a bad "“personality match.”" What they cannot
be fired for is a discriminatory reason specifically outlawed by a statute.
- In order to prove a discrimination claim (i.e., that you were fired,
demoted, etc. because of discrimination and not because of some legitimate
reason), you must be able to show the following:
- The employer knew or figured out that you are HIV-positive or have AIDS;
- You were qualified to perform the essential functions of the job with or without reasonable accommodation; and
- Adverse action was taken against you because of your HIV or AIDS
status and the pretextual reason given by the employer for the adverse action
is false.
- If your employer knows that you have HIV or AIDS, identify exactly
who knows, how they know, and when they found out. If you have not told your
employer, is there any other way the employer would know or suspect your
HIV status?
- Consider the reasons why you believe that you are being treated
differently because of HIV status, including the following areas:
- Have other employees in similar situations been treated differently or the same?
- Has your employer followed its personnel policies?
- Did the adverse treatment begin shortly after the employer learned of your HIV status?
- Have you been out of work due to illness for any period of time and did the adverse treatment begin upon your return to work?
- What will your employer’s version of events be? How will you prove that the employer’s version is false?
- Do you have any difficulty fulfilling the duties of your job because
of any HIV-related health or medical issue? Does your condition prevent
full-time work, or require time off for medical appointments, lighter duties
or a less stressful position? You might want to try brainstorming to create
a reasonable accommodation that you can propose to your employer. Here are
some points to consider:
- How does the company operate and how would the accommodation work in practice?
- Put yourself in your supervisor’s shoes. What objections might be
raised to the requested reasonable accommodation? For example, if you need
to leave at a certain time for medical appointments, who would cover your
duties?
Housing Discrimination on the Basis of HIV Status
It is illegal under both New Hampshire law (RSA § 354-A:8 et seq.) and
the National Fair Housing Amendments of 1989 to discriminate in the sale
or rental of housing on the basis of HIV status. A person cannot be
evicted from an apartment because of their HIV or AIDS status, or because
they are regarded as having HIV or AIDS.
In addition, a person cannot be discriminated against in housing because
of a disability of the buyer or renter, a person intending to reside in the
housing, or any person “associated with” the buyer or renter. RSA §
354-A:12. This means a person cannot be discriminated against because
their roommate, lover, friend, relative, or business partner has HIV.
Public Accomodations Discrimination / Access to Health Care
Under both New Hampshire law and the ADA, it is unlawful to exclude a person
with HIV from a public place (what the law refers to as a “public accommodation”)
or to provide unequal or restricted services to a person with HIV in a public
place.
It is also unlawful to release any written communication (such
as a notice or advertisement) indicating that such accommodation will be
denied to persons with HIV, or that their presence is unwelcome. RSA §
354-A:17.
What kinds of public places are included?
Federal
Law, under the ADA, defines “public accommodation” more broadly as virtually
any place of business, and also includes non-business entities such as schools.
New Hampshire
law most likely includes a private medical office within the definition of
“public accommodation” although no court has formally decided this issue.
Therefore, people with HIV are protected from discrimination in virtually
every public place or business, including bars, restaurants, hotels, stores,
schools, vocational or other educational programs, taxi cabs, buses, airplanes
and other modes of transportation, health clubs, hospitals and medical and
dental offices – as long as these facilities are generally open to the public
and are not private membership clubs.
Discrimination in Access to Medical Care
Believe
it or not, persons with HIV are still faced with discrimination by hospitals,
doctors, dentists, and other health care providers. This discrimination
can take the form of an outright refusal to provide medical services or an
illegal referral because of a patient’s HIV status.
Both an outright
refusal to provide medical treatment and unnecessary referrals on the basis
of a person’s disability are unlawful under New Hampshire law and the ADA.
Typical arguments raised by health care providers:
1) “Treating People with HIV is Dangerous.” Doctors
and dentists may claim that a refusal to treat a patient with HIV is
legitimate because they fear they might contract HIV themselves through needlesticks
or other exposures to blood. However, studies of health care workers
have concluded that risk of contracting HIV from occupational exposure is
minuscule, especially with the use of universal precautions. For this reason, in 1998, the United States Supreme Court ruled in Bragdon v. Abbott that health care providers cannot refuse to treat people with HIV based on concerns or fears about HIV transmission. In
addition to the legal perspective, both the American Medical Association
and the American Dental Association have issued policies that it is unethical
to refuse treatment to a person with HIV.
2) Slightly More Subtle: “I Am Not Qualified to Treat an HIV-Positive Patient.” A
slightly more subtle form of discrimination occurs when doctors or dentists
claim that they are not qualified or equipped to treat the patient and refer
that patient elsewhere. In these cases, the merits of a discrimination
claim depend upon whether, based on objective medical evidence, the services
or treatment needed by the patient require a referral to a specialist or
are within the scope of services and competence of the provider. In United States v. Morvant,
for example, a federal district court in Louisiana rejected a dentist’s claim
that patients with HIV require a specialist for routine dental care.
The court agreed with the testimony of experts who said that no special training
or expertise, other than that possessed by a general dentist, is required
to provide dental treatment to people with HIV. The Court specifically
rejected the dentist’s arguments that he was unqualified because he had not
kept up with the literature and training necessary to treat patients with
HIV. While this case arose in the context of dental care, it is applicable
to other medical settings as well.
Under Title III of the
ADA (codified as Title 42 of the United States Code, Sections 12181-12188),
and similar provisions of New Hampshire law, it is illegal for a health care
provider to:
- Deny an HIV-positive patient the “full and equal enjoyment”
of medical services or to deny an HIV-positive patient the “opportunity to
benefit” from medical services in the same manner as other patients.
-
Establish “eligibility criteria” for the privilege of receiving medical services
which tend to screen out patients who have tested positive for HIV.
-
Provide “different or separate” services to patients who are HIV-positive
or fail to provide services to patients in the “most integrated setting.”
-
Deny equal medical services to a person who is known to have a “relationship”
or “association” to a person with HIV, such as a spouse, partner, child,
or friend.
Applying these specific provisions of the ADA to the practice of health care, the following practices are illegal:
-
A health care provider cannot decline to treat a person with HIV based on
a perceived risk of HIV transmission or because the physician simply does
not feel comfortable treating a person with HIV.
- A
health care provider cannot agree to treat a patient only in a treatment
setting outside the physician’s regular office, such as a special hospital
clinic, simply because the person is HIV-positive.
-
A health care provider cannot refer an HIV-positive patient to another clinic
or specialist, unless the required treatment is outside the scope of the
physician’s usual practice or specialty. The ADA requires that referrals
of HIV-positive patients be made on the same basis as referrals of other
patients. It is, however, permissible to refer a patient to specialized
care if the patient has HIV-related medical conditions which are outside
the realm of competence or scope of services of the provider.
-
A health care provider cannot increase the cost of services to an HIV-positive
patient in order to use additional precautions beyond the mandated OSHA and
CDC infection control procedures. Under certain circumstances, it may
be an ADA violation to even use unnecessary additional precautions which
tend to stigmatize a patient simply on the basis of HIV status.
-
A health care provider cannot limit the scheduled times for treating HIV-positive
patients, such as insisting that an HIV-positive patient come in at the end
of the day.
Remedies for Discrimination
New Hampshire Law
To pursue a claim under the New Hampshire Anti-discrimination statute (RSA
§ 354-A),
any person who has been discriminated against in employment, housing or a
place of public accommodation must first file a claim with the New Hampshire
Commission for Human Rights (NHCHR). Complaints of discrimination
must be filed within 180 days of the last discriminatory act or acts.
There are very few exceptions for lateness, and GLAD encourages people to
move promptly in filing claims. After filing with the NHCHR, a person
can proceed with the case there. The commission has full power to investigate
the case, have a trial, and make an award of damages just as a court would.
Federal Law
To pursue a claim under the Americans
with Disabilities Act for employment discrimination, a person must file a
claim with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) within 300
days of the date of the discriminatory act. A person may remove an
ADA claim from the EEOC and file a lawsuit in state or federal court.
To
pursue a claim under the Americans with Disabilities Act for discrimination
in a place of public accommodation, a person may, without first going to
an administrative agency, file a claim in state or federal court for injunctive
relief only (i.e., seeking a court order that the discriminatory conduct
cease). Money damages are not available for violation of Title III
of the ADA unless they are sought by the United States Department of Justice.
To pursue a claim under the National Fair Housing Act for discrimination
in housing, a person may file a complaint in court with the United States
Office of Housing and Urban Development in Boston.
HIV Testing & Privacy
HIV Testing
Informed Consent Required for Testing
No physician, licensed nurse practitioner, employee of a health care facility,
or employee of a blood bank, may administer an HIV test unless the patient
has provided HIV-specific consent. New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated
(RSA) § 141-F:5.
Prior to taking an HIV test, providers must inform the patient about the
“medical interpretations of positive and negative findings” and the provisions
of New Hampshire law regarding both the confidentiality of HIV test results
and the circumstances under which HIV test results may be disclosed to others
without consent (see below). RSA § 141-F:5. In addition,
upon notification of the HIV test results, New Hampshire law mandates “appropriate
counseling” of the individual who was tested. RSA § 141-F:7, II.
New Hampshire law does not mandate written consent for an HIV test.
In order to avoid disputes about whether HIV-specific consent has been obtained,
providers may want to document a patient’s consent in the record or obtain
HIV-specific consent in writing.
Exceptions to the Requirement of Voluntary Informed Consent
1. Testing of Persons Convicted of Sexual Assault Crimes
All people convicted of a sexual assault crime are tested for HIV.
The test results will be disclosed to the person convicted and to the office
of victim/witness assistance. The office of victim/witness assistance
is authorized to disclose the test results to the victim and the county attorney
victim/witness advocates, although this is discretionary. The victim
may be notified regardless of whether the victim has requested notification.
The state must also provide counseling and referrals to the victim and the
person convicted, and offer HIV testing for the victim. RSA § 632-A:10-b.
2. Prisoners
Individuals who are convicted and confined to a correctional facility, or
people committed to New Hampshire Hospital (the state psychiatric hospital),
“may be tested without obtaining written informed consent to the testing,
when the results of such tests are necessary for the placement and management
of such individuals in the facility,” in accordance with the written policies
and procedures of the chief administrator of the facility. RSA § 141-F:5,
IV.
In addition, test results of HIV-positive persons committed to a prison or
mental health facility are disclosed to the medical director or chief medical
officer of such facility. The medical director of the facility “shall”
provide the facility’s administrator “whatever medical data is necessary
to properly assign, treat, or manage the affected individual.” Similarly,
the administrator “may” share this information with other officials who require
the information to properly assign, treat, or manage the affected individual.
RSA § 141-F:7, IV.
3. Patient Emergencies
When a patient is incapable of giving informed consent, a physician (or person
authorized by a physician) may take an HIV test without informed consent
if the test is “immediately necessary to protect the health of the [patient].”
RSA § 141-F:5, V.
4. Testing of Donated Blood Products
Any agency receiving purchased or donated blood products “shall” test them
for HIV prior to their distribution and use. RSA § 141-F:5, I
- III.
Special Categories Regarding HIV Testing
1. Testing of Minors
a) Informed Consent
Any minor over the age of 14 can provide consent to be tested and treated
for HIV without the consent or knowledge of a parent or legal guardian.
RSA § 141-C:18, II.
b) Disclosure
A physician is not obligated to, but may, disclose a positive test result
to a parent or legal guardian of a person who is under the age of 18. RSA
§ 141-F:7, III. If confidentiality is important to you, it is
a good idea to talk to your doctor up front and understand his or her policies
on this issue.
2. HIV Testing by Insurers
New Hampshire law makes a distinction between HIV testing by health organizations
and HIV testing done by insurers. A separate set of laws under the
state Unfair Insurance Trade Practices Act (RSA § 417:4, XIX) governs
HIV testing by insurers, rather than the general HIV testing statute.
a) Informed Consent
In order to test an insurance applicant for HIV, an insurer must obtain written
consent for an HIV test on a form designated by the Department of Health
and Human Services, containing information about the medical interpretations
of positive and negative test results, disclosure of test results, and the
purpose for which the results may be used.
b) Privacy
The insurer can disclose the results of a positive HIV test only to the individual
tested or any person the individual clearly authorized in writing on the
form.
The insurer must maintain all results and records “confidential and protected against inadvertent or unwarranted intrusion.”
c) Remedy
The confidentiality provisions are enforced by the Commissioner of Insurance.
If the Commissioner finds that an insurer violated any confidentiality provision,
a consumer may subsequently bring a suit against the insurer. RSA §
417:19. If the consumer prevails, he or she may recover damages, costs,
and reasonable attorney’s fees. RSA § 417:20.
3. Involuntary Testing of Patients After Occupational Exposure
New Hampshire law does not provide any authorization for involuntary HIV
testing of patients in the event of an exposure to a health care worker or
emergency first aid personnel.
However, in the event that an emergency response or public safety worker
experiences an occupational exposure to an infectious disease, the emergency
response worker’s employer must have a medical referral consultant evaluate
the exposure and give appropriate care, including prophylactic treatment.
The medical referral consultant is required to “make all reasonable efforts
to request and obtain a blood specimen from a source individual” for HIV
testing when, in his or her opinion, HIV testing is “necessary in order to
determine the proper prophylactic treatment or advice for the exposed worker.”
Nonetheless, the source individual or their legal guardian must consent to
an HIV test and any disclosure of the test results to third persons. RSA
§ 141-G.
Privacy
Confidentiality of HIV Test Results
According to New Hampshire law, the identity of any person tested for HIV
“shall not be disclosed to any person or agency except”:
- the individual tested;
- their parent or legal guardian if they are a minor or a mentally incompetent adult; and
- the physician ordering the test, or the person authorized by the physician. RSA § 141-F:7-8.
New Hampshire law provides privacy protections for HIV+ test results in virtually
every context. Under New Hampshire law, “[a]ll records and any other
information pertaining to a person’s testing for [HIV] shall be maintained
by a health care provider, health or social service agency, organization,
business, school or any other entity, public or private, as confidential,
and protected from inadvertent or unwarranted intrusion.” RSA §
141-F:8.
These confidentiality provisions apply to the disclosure of mental health,
substance abuse, and other health-related records containing HIV or AIDS
status information.
Unlike informed consent to test an individual for HIV, where oral consent
is adequate, written consent is required to disclose an individual’s HIV
test results, or even that a person was the subject of an HIV test.
Such written authorization must be HIV-specific and must include the reason
for the request to disclose the test result. RSA § 141-F:8.
Exceptions to the New Hampshire HIV Privacy Statute
1. Health of the Patient
A physician may disclose HIV test results to another physician or health
care provider “directly involved” in the patient’s health care if the disclosure
is “necessary in order to protect the health of the person tested.” RSA §
141-F:8, IV.
2. Blood Donations
The identity of a person who tests positive for HIV may be disclosed to an
agency who receives blood donations, provided that the information remains
confidential and protected from unwarranted intrusion. RSA § 141-F:8,
V.
Remedies for Violation of the Testing and Privacy Statute
Any person who violates the HIV confidentiality and disclosure statutes described
above (RSA § 141-F:7-141-F:8) shall be liable for actual damages, court
costs, and attorney’s fees, plus a civil penalty of up to $5000. RSA §
141-F:10.
Violations of the informed consent, test reporting, or confidentiality provisions
described above (RSA § 141-F:5-141-F:8) may also result in criminal
liability. Violations are considered misdemeanors if committed by a
person, and felonies if committed by a corporate entity.
The Constitutional Right to Privacy
Many courts have found that a person has a constitutional privacy right to
the nondisclosure of HIV status. Courts have based this right on the
Due Process Clause of the U.S. Constitution which creates a privacy interest
in avoiding disclosure of certain types of personal information.
The constitutional right to privacy can only be asserted when the person
disclosing the information is a state or government actor -- e.g., police,
prison officials, doctors at a state hospital.
To determine whether there has been a violation of this right to privacy,
courts balance the nature of the intrusion into a person’s privacy against
the weight to be given the government’s legitimate reasons for a policy or
practice which results in disclosure.
State HIV Reporting Laws
1. HIV Surveillance
New Hampshire regulations require physicians, health care providers, and
diagnostic labs to report HIV and AIDS cases to the Department of Public
Health within 72 hours. NH He-P 301.02. Local boards of health
and individuals in charge of institutions where there is no health care provider
in attendance are also required to report cases of communicable diseases
to the Department “immediately,” including HIV or AIDS. NH He-P 301.03.
While reporting of AIDS diagnoses must include the patient’s name, reporting
the name of a patient diagnosed with HIV infection is optional and left to
the discretion of the person reporting. According to the regulations,
such reporting “may include the patient’s name.” NH He-P 301.03 (a).
In practice, according to the Department of Public Health, 95% of HIV cases
reported are identified by name. The state does not have plans to move
to a unique identifier system for the reporting of HIV-positive test results.
2. Contact Referral Program
New Hampshire law includes a general provision permitting the Commissioner
of Public Health or his or her designee to do “contact referral” to notify
persons who may have been infected with HIV. The law, however, prohibits
the Commissioner or his or her designee from disclosing the identity of any
HIV-positive individual. RSA § 141-F:9. The State’s current practice
is to offer assistance to HIV-positive individuals in notifying partners.
Warning Third Parties of Harm From Clients
1. The Dilemma
A counselor or physician may learn that a client is engaging in unsafe sex
without having disclosed his or her HIV-positive status to the partner.
Many people have asked whether there is a legal basis to breach client or
patient confidentiality under these circumstances. It is the AIDS Law
Project’s view that there is no clear justification for such a breach of
confidentiality under New Hampshire law. Providers and consumers alike,
however, should be aware that the case law in this area is still developing
and remains unresolved. For a legal opinion on how to handle a particular
situation, a professional should consult with a supervisor or lawyer.
2. Statutory Duty or Right to Breach Confidentiality
New Hampshire has statutes generally addressing a duty by specified health
providers to warn of threats of client violence to third parties. When
a client has communicated a serious threat of physical violence against a
clearly identified victim or a serious threat of substantial damage to real
property, covered professionals in New Hampshire have a “duty to warn”
of, or take reasonable precautions to provide protection from, a client’s
violent behavior. These laws apply to certified mental health professionals
(RSA § 330-A:22), physicians (RSA § 329:31), and nurses (RSA §
326-B:31).
The obligation to warn can be fulfilled through:
- reasonable efforts to communicate the threat to a victim;
- notification of police;
- civil commitment of the client to the state mental
health system. (Note: the client must be in a mental condition “as
a result of the mental illness to pose a likelihood of danger to himself
or others.”)
A covered professional is not liable for information disclosed to a third
party in an effort to discharge the duty described above.
Based on current New Hampshire law, there is not a clear legal justification
to breach the confidentiality of a client’s HIV status.
It is important to keep in mind that New Hampshire law does not permit the
disclosure of HIV status without written consent. Therefore, although
no court has resolved the issue, the applicability of these duty to warn
statutes to HIV is doubtful in light of this broad prohibition on the disclosure
of HIV status in New Hampshire.
Other HIV-Related Laws
Access to Clean Needles
Under a New Hampshire law which went into effect on January 1, 2001, a person
who is over 18 years of age may legally purchase a hypodermic syringe or
needle at a pharmacy without a prescription from a physician. A pharmacy
may sell to any such person up to ten syringes or needles at any single purchase.
RSA § 318:52-C.
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