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Adopted by the 40th World Medical Assembly
Vienna, Austria, September 1988
and rescinded at
the WMA General Assembly, Pilanesberg, South Africa, 2006
The World Medical Association, Inc. has previously adopted guidelines
to assist National Medical Associations in developing strategies
to cope with a growing AIDS epidemic. This statement provides
the individual physician with direction as to his or her professional
responsibilities with reference to the treatment of AIDS patients,
and also as to the physician's responsibility to his or her patients
in the event the physician is seropositive.
The WMA Interim Statement on AIDS, adopted in October 1987, states
in part:
"Patients with AIDS and those who test positively for the
antibody to the AIDS virus must be provided with appropriate medical
care and should not be treated unfairly or suffer from arbitrary
or irrational discrimination in their daily lives. Physicians
have a long and honored tradition of tending to patients afflicted
with infectious diseases with compassion and courage. That tradition
must be continued throughout the AIDS epidemic."
AIDS patients are entitled to competent medical care with compassion
and respect for human dignity. A physician may not ethically refuse
to treat a patient whose condition is within the physician's current
realm of competence, solely because the patient is seropositive.
Medical ethics do not permit categorical discrimination against
a patient based solely on his or her seropositivity. A person
who is afflicted with AIDS needs competent, compassionate treatment.
A physician who is not able to provide the care and services required
by persons with AIDS should make an appropriate referral to those
physicians or facilities that are equipped to provide such services.
Until the referral can be accomplished, the physician must care
for the patient to the best of his or her ability.
The rights and interests of those who are infected with the AIDS
virus, as well as those who are not, are entitled to protection.
A physician who knows that he or she has an infectious disease
should not engage in any activity that creates a risk of transmission
of the disease to others. In the context of possible exposure
to AIDS, the activity in which the physician wishes to engage
will be the controlling factor.
In the provision of medical care, if a risk of transmission of
an infectious disease from a physician to a patient exists, disclosure
of that risk to patients is not enough; patients are entitled
to expect that their physicians will not increase their exposure
to the risk of contracting an infectious disease.
If no risk exists, disclosure of the physician's medical condition
to his or her patients will serve no rational purpose; if a risk
does exists, the physician should not engage in that activity.
If a patient is fully informed of the physician's condition and
the risks that condition presents, and the patient elects to continue
care and treatment with the seropositive physician, great care
must be exercised to assure that true informed consent is obtained.
The duty of all physicians is to refrain from issuing false certificates
even if the intention of such is to help the patients to stay
within his regular environment.
The duty of the physician is to comply with and make comply the
sanitary and protective rules established for health personnel
because they are known, simple and effective.
The duty of all physicians is to participate fully in preventive
programs initiated by public authorities to stop the spread of
AIDS.
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