Lawmakers in Indonesia's Papua are mulling the selective use of chip
implants in HIV carriers to monitor their behaviour in a bid to keep
them from infecting others, a doctor said Tuesday.
John Manangsang, a doctor who is helping to prepare a new healthcare
regulation bill for Papua's provincial parliament, said that unusual
measures were needed to combat the virus.
"We in the government in Papua have to think hard on ways to provide
protection to people from the spread of the disease," Manangsang told
AFP.
"Some of the infected people experience a change of behaviour and can
turn more aggressive and would not think twice of infecting others," he
alleged, saying lawmakers were considering various sanctions for these
people.
"Among one of the means being considered is the monitoring of those
infected people who can pose a danger to others," Manangsang said.
"The use of chip implants is one of the ways to do so, but only for
those few who turn aggressive and clearly continue to disregard what
they know about the disease and spread the virus to others," he said.
A decision was still a long way off, he added.
The head of the Papua chapter of ... more »
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Wednesday, July 25
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on Wed 25 Jul 2007 07:35 AM AKDT
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