The STD/STI Contagion Prevention Act is a federal law passed by the Union of Everett federal government to attempt to contain, reduce and prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases and infections, especially that of HIV/AIDS. The law enhances previous laws regarding pornography and sex work, removes STD records from healthcare privacy protections, requires the addition of HIV/AIDS, HPV or Herpes infection warnings on the back of federal NID cards, makes STD testing mandatory, bans HIV/AIDS positive persons from medical field employment and makes the spreading of sexually transmitted diseases deliberately or knowingly, both criminal offenses.
| Attributes | Values |
|---|
| rdfs:label
| - STD Contagion Prevention Act
|
| rdfs:comment
| - The STD/STI Contagion Prevention Act is a federal law passed by the Union of Everett federal government to attempt to contain, reduce and prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases and infections, especially that of HIV/AIDS. The law enhances previous laws regarding pornography and sex work, removes STD records from healthcare privacy protections, requires the addition of HIV/AIDS, HPV or Herpes infection warnings on the back of federal NID cards, makes STD testing mandatory, bans HIV/AIDS positive persons from medical field employment and makes the spreading of sexually transmitted diseases deliberately or knowingly, both criminal offenses.
|
| dcterms:subject
| |
| abstract
| - The STD/STI Contagion Prevention Act is a federal law passed by the Union of Everett federal government to attempt to contain, reduce and prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases and infections, especially that of HIV/AIDS. The law enhances previous laws regarding pornography and sex work, removes STD records from healthcare privacy protections, requires the addition of HIV/AIDS, HPV or Herpes infection warnings on the back of federal NID cards, makes STD testing mandatory, bans HIV/AIDS positive persons from medical field employment and makes the spreading of sexually transmitted diseases deliberately or knowingly, both criminal offenses.
|