By David I. Schulman
David I. Schulman is supervising attorney of the AIDS/HIV Discrimination Unit in the Office of Los Angeles City Attorney Rockard J. Delgadillo. In 1986, he became the nation's first fulltime government AIDS attorney.
HIV legal checkups are a prime example
of a new public health law field that has emerged
from the AIDS epidemic —health and human
rights. In the mid - 1980s, public health and
AIDS civil rights seemed on a collision course.
But when the Los Angeles City attorney established
the nation's first AIDS discrimination unit in
1986, we were committed to demonstrating that
this need not be the case.
Our unit was created to enforce the
world's first AIDS antidiscrimination law, enacted
by the city of Los Angeles in 1985. Los Angeles
Municipal Code §§ 45.80 et seq. We soon
detected a pattern in the cases we investigated:
Virtually every one began with an unnecessary
disclosure. A complainant might have shared his
status with a supervisor in the mistaken belief
that his employer had a legal right to know, or
opened up to a neighbor expecting friendship.
Instead he suffered harassment, termination, or
eviction. If ony he had received legal counseling
about his right to keep his condition private
before such disclosures, such discrimination
could have been prevented altogether.
We soon called this idea an HIV legal
checkup. The concept was simple: HIV-positive
people needed legal counseling as soon as possible
after learning their test results. The counseling
would provide information on disclosing their
status only to those who had a legal need to know,
thus preventing discrimination in employment,
housing, and public accommodation.
Sadly, we lacked the
resources to create such a program. Enter Brad
Sears, who contacted us in spring 1996. Sears
was finishing a federal clerkship and wanted to
practice HIV law. He wrote a grant proposal that
expanded our concept into a more comprehensive
client intake strategy that covered the full range
of HIV-related legal issues such as denial of
benefits, tenant rights, immigration, family law,
and debtor-creditor conflicts as well as our initial
discrimination prevention idea. In spring 1997,
Sears's new project became part of a new Los Angeles-area
HIV legal services program, the HIV & AIDS
Legal Services Alliance (HALSA).
When Sears, now a UCLA law professor,
later evaluated his project, he identified several
elements with implications not only for HIV legal
services delivery but poverty law service delivery
generally. Law students could perform the checkups,
ensuring a steady stream of volunteers. The comprehensiveness
of the checkups meant that checkup staff indentified
incipient legal problems before they became crises.
The client education component empowered clients
to resolve many such problems themselves. Those
requiring intervention required less attorney
time than had the issues first metastasized, enabling
HALSA lawyers to meet the needs of more clients.
Later client services also benefited from the checkups. Because of the client education component, clients identified subsequent needs more quickly. They called more promptly because they associated HALSA with the positive experience of their checkup. The checkup intake interviews produced yet another benefit, the creation of a database that served as a de facto ongoing needs assessment tool that helped HALSA's director to identify newly emerging client needs such as immigration or tax relief. HIV legal checkups also have implications for health and human rights, the newly emerging field of public health law:
1. HIV legal checkups improve access to healthcare. When legal checkups protect employment, they preserve private health insurance. When they protect public benefits, they preserve access to publicly financed care. And when they protect renters' rights, they preserve the stability essential for taking life-saving medications and attending doctors' appointments on time.
2. HIV legal checkups may slow the spread of HIV. Fear of discrimination discourages voluntary testing. As legal checkups reduce discrimination, we believe more prople will come forward to be tested, a vital element in slowing the epidemic. In 2001, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) adopted our office's recommendation that the discrimination prevention core of legal checkups be included as an element in the agency's Revised Guidelines for HIV Counseling, Testing, and Referral. 50 MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY WEEKLY REPORT, No. RR-19, Nov. 9,2001, at 37, available at www.cdc.gov/mmwr/PDF/rr/rr5019.pdf. In so doing, the CDC acknowledged for the first time the role of attorneys in combating HIV, affirming the health and human rights perspective that civil rights and public health work best together, not in conflict, to ensure the well-being of all.
Number 4 · Volume 31 · Fall 2004 · American Bar Association · Human Rights · 18
"Making a Difference with HIV Legal Checkups" by David I. Schulman, published in Human Rights, Volume 31, No.4, Fall 2004 © 2004 by the
American Bar Association. Reproduced by permission. All rights reserved. This information or any portion thereof may not be copied or
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American Bar Association.
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