The Supreme Court of Canada has absolved HIV
carriers of the legal obligation to inform sex partners about their
condition as long as they have a low level of the virus and wear a
condom.
In a major 9-0 ruling Friday, the
high court specified those
two key conditions, clarifying the rules on
whether it is a crime for people with extremely low levels of HIV to
withhold their condition from their sex partners.
The court said it was reflecting the
medical advances in treating the virus that causes AIDS since it first
ruled on the issue in 1998 and left open the possibility of adapting to
future changes in science in medicine.
The Supreme Court ruled on two separate cases, from Manitoba and Quebec, updating its landmark 1998 ruling on the subject.
The court ruled 14 years ago that
people with HIV must inform their sex partners of their condition, or
face a charge of aggravated sexual assault, which carries a maximum life
sentence.
Now, that duty to disclose has been removed as a long as the HIV carrier has a “low load” of the virus and wears a condom.
“On the evidence before us, a
realistic possibility of transmission is negated by evidence that the
accused’s viral load was low at the time of intercourse and that condom
protection was used,” Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin wrote on behalf
of the court.
“However, the general proposition
that a low
viral load combined with condom use negates a realistic
possibility of transmission of HIV does not preclude the common law from
adapting to future advances in treatment and to circumstances where
risk factors other than those considered in the present case are at
play.”
The ruling was a partial victory for
HIV/AIDS activists who have argued that the 1998 ruling sowed confusion
and was applied unevenly. They wanted the decision struck down, but
argued that, in the alternative, the court should at least refine that
ruling to reflect new medical advances.
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