The ethics of responsibility

Edwin J. Bernard
Published: 18 July 2010

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For many, the discussion of responsibility and HIV transmission raises difficult and uncomfortable issues about individual morality, moral behaviour, and appropriate roles of government and public health agencies in addressing the rights and responsibilities of persons living with HIV and those who are uninfected. We acknowledge that some see this issue as one with very clearly defined sides that represent “right” and “wrong” behavior, for example, where any sexual activity between an individual who knows he or she is infected and an uninfected person represents a lapse of moral judgment. However, this perspective fails to recognize the very low relative risk of some sexual behaviors, the complexities of sexual relationships, and the motivations and autonomy of uninfected persons who willingly and knowingly enter into sexual relations with HIV-seropositive partners.

Ann O’Leary and Richard Wolitski, (US) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2009.1

In November 2007, the UNAIDS Secretariat and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) hosted an international consultation on the application of the criminal law to potential or actual HIV exposure or transmission.2 The consultation included representatives of other United Nations agencies, parliamentarians, members of the judiciary, criminal law experts, civil society representatives and people living with HIV.  Their discussions highlight the difficult moral, ethical and practical issues raised by such criminalisation.

UNAIDS consultation participants unanimously agreed that potential or actual exposure to HIV that did not result in transmission was not 'harmful' enough to criminalise and that criminal liability for HIV transmission should never fall on people living with HIV who:

    • are not aware that they are HIV-positive

    • do not know how HIV is transmitted.2

Consultation participants further agreed that there should be no criminal liability for HIV transmission if the person living with HIV has done at least one of the following prior to consensual sex:

  • Taken measures to reduce the risk of HIV exposure, such as using condoms or otherwise practising HIV-related risk-reduction methods

  • Disclosed their HIV-positive status to their partners or reasonably believed their partner had consented to the risk of HIV exposure.2

They also agreed that obligated disclosure is not ethically necessary and that “[u]nlike the case of deliberate deceit, in the case of simple non-disclosure the partner of the HIV-positive person has not been misled into basing choices on wilful misinformation. Having a criminal law requiring disclosure of HIV infection would fall most heavily upon those whose circumstances already make it difficult to disclose.”2

They noted that "sexual activity, with any partner, always carries some risks of harm. A person engaging freely and voluntarily in sex does not necessarily need to know the HIV status of the sexual partner. He or she may choose not to engage in certain sexual acts so as to avoid the higher degree of risk they pose, may choose to take preventive measures to lower the risk to a level they find acceptable (such as using condoms), or may choose to engage in unprotected sex aware that a risk of HIV transmission may exist.”2

However, consultation participants were divided over the more difficult issue of whether someone who has neither disclosed nor taken HIV risk-reducing measures should be criminally liable if transmission has resulted. Some expressed the belief that there was a moral and ethical difference between non-disclosure and “deliberately deceiving someone as to the risk of harm of engaging in unprotected sex.” These participants argued that such 'sins of commission' may be criminalised if there was no legitimate justification or excuse for such deception, such as fear of violence. Nevertheless, they appreciated that this moral and ethical distinction may be too difficult to legislate for, and/or to prove, or defend.2

For more on how the criminal justice system approaches the criminality of the defendant’s state of mind see the chapter: Proof 

References

  1. O’Leary A and Wolitski RJ Moral agency and the sexual transmission of HIV. Psychol Bull.135(3):478-94, 2009
  2. UNAIDS/UNDP International Consultation on the Criminalization of HIV Transmission: Summary of main issues and conclusions. Geneva, 2008

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A writer and advocate on a range of HIV-related issues, Edwin has a particular specialism in HIV and the criminal law. He works with national and international HIV organisations, including the International AIDS Society, GNP+ and UNAIDS, as well having as a long association with NAM as a writer on this topic and as the former editor of HIV Treatment Update. To visit Edwin's blog and respond to posts click here.

This content was checked for accuracy at the time it was written. It may have been superseded by more recent developments. NAM recommends checking whether this is the most current information when making decisions that may affect your health.
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This content was checked for accuracy at the time it was written. It may have been superseded by more recent developments. NAM recommends checking whether this is the most current information when making decisions that may affect your health.

NAM’s information is intended to support, rather than replace, consultation with a healthcare professional. Talk to your doctor or another member of your healthcare team for advice tailored to your situation.