Premarital HIV Testing

GS2 – Governance

Context:

Meghalaya, following Goa, is considering making premarital HIV/AIDS testing compulsory, sparking debate over health benefits, human rights, and personal liberty.

HIV/AIDS – Basics & Current Status in India
  • HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus): Attacks CD4 (T) cells, weakening the immune system.
  • AIDS (Acquired Immuno Deficiency Syndrome): Final stage of HIV infection, marked by severe immune failure.
  • Prevalence in India:
    • 2.5 million People Living with HIV (PLHIV).
    • Adult prevalence rate: 0.2%.
    • ~66,400 new infections and ~69,000 AIDS-related deaths annually (UNAIDS).
    • Highest prevalence reported in North-East states (Mizoram, Nagaland, Manipur).
Arguments in Favour of Mandatory Testing
  • Prevention of Transmission: ART treatment after detection helps prevent spousal and vertical (mother-to-child) transmission, potentially avoiding thousands of new infections.
  • Family Health Protection: Early detection reduces AIDS-related deaths and secures family well-being.
  • Women’s Safeguard: Particularly relevant in high-prevalence North-East states, where women face greater vulnerability.
  • Awareness & Linkage to Care: Encourages testing, ART enrolment, and viral load suppression nationwide.
Arguments Against Mandatory Testing
  • Human Rights Concern: Compulsory testing undermines the principle of informed consent, violating the HIV & AIDS (Prevention & Control) Act, 2017.
  • Stigma & Discrimination: May intensify social prejudice against HIV-positive individuals.
  • Practical Barriers: Cultural taboos, extramarital norms, and low condom usage could limit effectiveness.
  • Privacy & Voluntary Care: Forced testing risks breaching privacy and discouraging voluntary participation in testing/treatment.
Government Initiatives & Targets
  • NACP Phase-V: Targeting an 80% reduction in new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths by 2025–26 (baseline: 2010).
  • Mission Sampark: Focused on awareness, testing expansion, and high-risk group identification.
  • 90-95-95 Goals: India aims for 95% detection, 95% ART coverage, and 95% viral suppression. Current progress: 81% diagnosed, 88% on ART, 97% with suppressed viral load.
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