Contact tracing
In epidemiology, contact tracing is the identification and diagnosis of people who may have come into contact with an infected person. For sexually transmitted diseases, this is generally limited to sexual partners and can fall under the heading of partner services.[1][2] But, for highly virulent diseases such as Ebola and tuberculosis, a thorough contact tracing would require information regarding casual contacts.
Partner notification
Some AIDS activists have argued that contact tracing is counter-productive in that it would lead people to avoid HIV testing for fear that it would breach their right to privacy.
By tracing the sexual partners of infected individuals, testing them for infection, treating the infected and tracing their contacts in turn, STI clinics could be very effective at suppressing infections in the general population.
In the 1980s, first genital herpes and then AIDS emerged into the public consciousness as sexually transmitted diseases that could not be cured by modern medicine. AIDS in particular has a long asymptomatic period—during which time HIV (the human immunodeficiency virus, which causes AIDS) can replicate and the disease can be transmitted to others—followed by a symptomatic period, which leads rapidly to death unless treated. HIV/AIDS entered the United States in about 1969 likely through a single infected immigrant from Haiti. Recognition that AIDS threatened a global pandemic led to public information campaigns and the development of treatments that allow AIDS to be managed by suppressing the replication of HIV for as long as possible. Contact tracing continues to be an important measure, even when diseases are incurable, as it helps to contain infection.
See also
References
- ↑ Rothenberg, R. (15 Oct 2002). "The transformation of partner notification". Clinical Infectious Diseases. 35 (Suppl 2): S138–45. doi:10.1086/342101. PMID 12353200.
- ↑ van Aar, F.; van Weert, Y.; Spijker, R.; Gotz, H.; de Coul, E. O. (19 Aug 2014). "Partner notification among men who have sex with men and heterosexuals with STI/HIV: different outcomes and challenges". Int J STD AIDS. doi:10.1177/0956462414547398. PMID 25141854.
External links
- Contact tracing and epidemics control in social networks (PDF)
- Transmission Network Analysis to Complement Routine Tuberculosis Contact Investigations (PDF)
- The Doctor's World; Sex, Privacy And Tracking H.I.V. Infections
- Australasian Contact Tracing Manual