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For world, arrogance instead of help
January 6, 2003
http://www.freep.com/voices/editorials/epop6_20030106.htm
The Bush administration never seems more out of touch with global
reality than when it wades into issues of population control.
Last month, U.S. delegates were soundly rebuffed when they tried to
inject the president's anti-abortion stance into the work of a United
Nations-sponsored Asian and Pacific Population Conference. The United
States proposed to strip any reference to "reproductive health services"
and "reproductive rights" from a development plan that was the topic of
the conference, arguing that their inclusion was effectively advocating
abortion and that efforts to boost condom use would only promote
underage sex.
The nations present so resented the U.S. pressure that, although it
wasn't necessary, they voted 31-1 and 32-1 to expressly include both
points.
Bush made clear his intent to let his anti-abortion stance drive U.S.
domestic and foreign policy when, as his first official act, he
reinstated a Reagan-era executive order barring any international agency
that takes U.S. family planning dollars from using any independent
funding to even talk about abortion.
This year he blocked $34 million appropriated by Congress for the UN
Population Fund. Then the U.S. delegates sent to the Asia-Pacific
conference asserted that "the United States supports the sanctity of
life from conception to natural death" -- a position Bush would be hard
pressed to get past the U.S. Supreme Court.
The Asia-Pacific region is home to about two-thirds of the 1.2
billion people on this planet who survive on the equivalent of less than
a dollar a day. Those nations see family planning as about much more
than abortion. In fact, done well, it averts abortion by giving women
and men the information -- and, yes, sometimes the birth control -- they
need to limit the size of their families, to make sure they do not have
more children than they can feed. It also helps prevent the spread of
AIDS, which is about to explode in Asia.
That's why family planning is such an important element of the United
Nations' ongoing efforts to halve poverty by 2015. That's why Bush's
unswerving attacks on it are so arrogant and shortsighted.
Factors associated with refusal to treat
HIV-infected patients: the results of a
national survey of dentists in
Canada
American Journal of Public Health, Vol 89, Issue 4
541-545, Copyright © 1999 by American
Public
Health Association
GM McCarthy, JJ Koval and JK MacDonald
School of Dentistry, University of Western Ontario,
London. gmccarth@julian.uwo.ca
OBJECTIVES: This study investigated dentists
refusal to treat patients who have HIV. METHODS: A survey was mailed to
a random sample of all licensed dentists in Canada, with 3 follow-up
attempts (n = 6444). Data were weighted to allow for probability of
selection and nonresponse and analyzed with Pearson's chi 2 and multiple
logistic regression. RESULTS: The response rate was 66%. Of the
respondents, 32% had knowingly treated HIV-infected patients in the last
year; 16% would refuse to treat HIV-infected patients. Respondents
reported willingness to treat HIV-infected patients (81%), injection
drug users (86%), hepatitis B virus-infected patients (87%), homosexual
and bisexual persons (94%), individuals with sexually transmitted
disease(s) (94%), and recipients of blood and blood products (97%). The
best predictors of refusal to treat patients with HIV were lack of
ethical responsibility (odds ratio = 9.0) and items related to fear of
cross-infection or lack of knowledge of HIV. CONCLUSIONS: One in 6
dentists reported refusal to treat HIV-infected patients, which was
associated primarily with respondents' lack of belief in an ethical
responsibility to treat patients with HIV and fears related to
cross-infection. These results have implications for undergraduate,
postgraduate, and continuing education.
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