[Vision2020] Today's Tribune

Shelly CJs at turbonet.com
Thu Dec 15 09:57:00 PST 2005


Health district urges testing in wake of HIV arrest


By DAVID JOHNSON
of the Tribune
MOSCOW -- The arrest of a Moscow man for allegedly having sex with a number
of people without first informing them he tested positive for HIV has
triggered an alert from the North Central District Health Department. 
Officials are recommending confidential counseling and HIV testing for all
persons who've had sexual contact with Kanay A. Mubita. A testing and
counseling session is scheduled from 5 to 9 p.m. today at the district
office here at 333 E. Palouse River Drive. 
Carol Moehrle, district director, said a similar session tentatively set for
the same time at a local tavern has been canceled due to problems with
ensuring anonymity on-site. 
Possibly 20 or more people have been identified as potential victims,
according to court records. Mubita, 31, has been charged with seven counts,
involving seven women, of transferring body fluids that may contain HIV. He
remains in the Latah County Jail on a $20,000 bond. 
Latah County Prosecutor William Thompson Jr. said he's not sure how many
more people might come forward, but his office will pursue additional cases
if the facts warrant prosecution. Deputy Prosecutor Michelle Evans, who's
handling the Mubita cases, said this is the first time Latah County
authorities have filed such charges against anyone. 
The law, said Thompson, makes it a felony if a person knows they have HIV
and then engages in sex with someone prior to alerting the partner of the
infection. HIV is the virus that can lead to AIDS. 
Local concern, said Moehrle, is legitimate, especially among those who
frequent the bar scene where Mubita, according to court records, was known
as a regular. 
But fear, added Moehrle, should be tempered by facts about the spread of HIV
 
Just because someone has sex with an infected person, said Moehrle, doesn't
mean the virus is automatically passed on. In fact, the odds are against it.
One of Mubita's alleged victims, for example, told authorities she'd been
having sex with the defendant on a regular basis for a number of years and
she's still testing negative. 
Health experts, said Moehrle, recommend that persons who've had sex with an
infected partner should be tested six months after the last encounter to
ensure negative test results. 
Certain sexual behavior, especially anal sex, increases the chance of
spreading the virus, said Moehrle. That's because anal sex creates an
increased chance of lesions, which provide a direct pathway into the blood
stream, she said. 
Persons who have lesions or sores anywhere on their body have an increased
chance of contracting the virus when having sex with an infected partner. 
Condoms provide an increased degree of protection but aren't fail safe,
Moehrle said. Likewise, birth control pills provide no protection against
the virus. Abstinence or sex within a monogamous relationship is the best
way to ensure against the sexual transfer of the disease, according to
experts. 
In addition to sexual contact, HIV can be spread through the sharing of
contaminated needles, transfusion of infected blood and blood products,
surgical transplanting of infected organs and tissues, and the sharing of
body piercing and tattooing equipment. An infected woman who gets pregnant
can also give the virus to her unborn baby. 
The virus has also been found in saliva, tears, bronchial secretions and
urine, according to the health district, but transmission via these
secretions has not been well documented. 
According to Idaho law, all positive tests conducted by any health-care
provider must be reported to state authorities within three days. Each case
must also be investigated by the local health district to identify
potentially exposed persons. 
------ 
Johnson may be contacted at deveryone at potlatch.com. 
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