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College Skaggs Center Page 6/The Battalion/Friday, August 14, 1987 World and Natior Officials recommend AIDS te — for people in high-risk groups By ATLANTA (AP) — Federal health officials Thursday recom mended routine AIDS testing for the sex partners of AIDS virus car riers, people with other sexually transmitted diseases and users of in- jectible narcotics, among other groups. The U.S. Public Health Service’s official AIDS testing recommenda tions, issued after months of public debate, stressed that individuals in these categories had the right to re fuse the tests. The recommendations came on the same day federal health officials acknowledged the number of re ported cases will be increased with a new clinical definition for AIDS. The PHS recommended that while “individuals have the right to decline,” health professionals should begin “routine (AIDS) counseling and testing” for: • Patients with sexually trans mitted diseases. • Drug users who injected their narcotics. • Women of childbearing-age at risk of AIDS infection, chiefly through drug abuse or sexual con tact. • Patients infected with tubercu losis, which can be compounded by an AIDS infection. • Sex partners of infected peo ple. • Those sharing drug needles with infected people. The national Centers for Disease Control said the goal of the testing is “to reduce further spread of infec tion,” with priority on “persons who are most likely to be infected or who practice high-risk behaviors.” AIDS, reported most often among homosexual men and abus ers of injectible drugs, is most fre quently transmitted through sex or contaminated drug needles. It also can be transmitted from mother to fetus. The PHS also recommended the availability of AIDS testing for any one who believes himself at risk for AIDS, and testing of male and fe male prostitutes by local and state ju risdictions. Further, the agency called for prison systems to study means of testing their inmates — federal in mates are already under a testing program — and for state and local officials to decide about routine, or even mandatory, AIDS tests for en gaged couples, taking into account “the prevalence of HIV (AIDS virus) infection in the area.” The federal government’s recom mendations do not include several controversial proposals floated at a public meeting in February — man- ital | datory testing for hospital patients, engaged couples and other groups. Those ideas were met with harsh criticism from AIDS activists and civil rights groups. In the recommendations released Thursday by the GDC, federal health officials called for every rea sonable effort ... to improver ente dentiality of test results.” Slot ker Bui While confidentiality is cru( : naiiila f°ld< increasing the number of peoplR^ a favor ing tested for AIDS, “it is of ca H greater importance that the p.I e y fiangei perceive that persons found tf ems , are positive will not be subject totffl ct * on rna propriate discrimination," the|j® e wear t said. M b °y shirl Federal health officials e!i: )0 j boots an that between 1 million and lljf ^ ,omb)rt; lion Ament .ms are infectedKid'jTU'K to l ll > virus whit h causes acquiredimr.|F'* en K , E deficiency syndrome; most art) 1UMacbe > aware they have the virus. Government scientistsbelie\;i,^ s ,be cb; 20 percent to 30 percent of tk : f* s | a S en< J a z fected with the AIDS virus vj° r ll ‘ s ' nt f r velop the deadly disease withir] n f asbs > T years. ieiglnnan.- The number of AIDS as(ir*| rma ^ „ nia ported in the United StateshaiH! art y’ passed 40,000. As of Morif* ie ean 40,051 cases had been repi 23,165 patients, or 59 percent, already died. Officials: Anchorage by Persian Gull safe, but crews still search for mines MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Officials closed part of a busy anchorage just south of the Persian Gulf where six mines were found, but declared it safe again after nightfall Thursday. Crews of four nations searched for more mines. Saudi police said in a delayed report that a Saudi Arabian coast guard vessel hit a mine at the northern end of the gulf Wednesday and two crewmen were slightly injured. The anchorage off Fujairah was a safe haven from the 7-year-old war between Iran and Iraq until the U.S-operated supertanker Texaco Ca ribbean struck a mine three days ago in the 35- square-mile area that was closed to traffic earlier Thursday. Six more have been found since the tanker was damaged Monday. They are the “spiked-globe’ tile type that explode on contact, and several ship- executives said they believe the mines were free-floating rather than tethered. Col. Saeed Samssoun, the Fujairah police chief, said Thursday night that a search of the coastal area found it free of mines, and “full safety” for international navigation had been en sured. Maritime executives in Fujairah said the radio had stopped broadcasting hourly warnings that began after the prohibition was announced. Iran has been accused of laying the mines but claims the United States is to blame and has of fered to help in the search. A dispatch from Iran’s official news agency quoted a naval commander as saying his ships would start minesweeping operations Friday, in international waters not specified, but would not work in the Fujairah area without permission. hman cc rette an< in a back When soi lame, Leigh Hi do for H student’ pen replies, jetya fixed i riting i< landing ays “You si Ht record.’ Ror years lived literatr s director The Saudi coast guard ship hit amine miles off the village of Khafji, more tkfai) at q” ex | miles northwest of the Fujairah anchorage qj arin „ j a police officer contacted by telephone in Kk j,, 197 j j ( The officer, who spoke on condition cjn4 :< Hmini UP BIG SAVINGS! » Buy and Sell Through Classified Ads Call 845-2611 La Bamba North Shore (PG) m Sat&Sun 2:104:107:109:10 Post Oak Mall Sat&Sun 2:15 4:45 7:159:5 Cinema I