Chocoholic wrote:Well in principle it's a good idea, but not sure how you'd implement it.
Definately the working girls should be tested.
Ah sorry C and K
, but in principle I think it's worse than pointless, as well as impractical - UAE is expecting 15 million tourists annually by 2010 (or is it 2015)? So that's 40,000 Aids tests per day
. Bringing a certificate is more practical perhaps but I expect that would put many tourists off coming here. Imagine Mum and Dad and three kids all having to go for a test before their holiday in the sun. And frequent travellers (business or tourist) would have to get one each time?
Resident expats have 3 years between tests to go to other high-risk countries and get infected and then infect people here - tourists or residents.
Is it correct that the virus can stay dormant and undetectable for several months after infection?
And besides all that, it's not something you catch like a cold. You have to share needles or have fun with someone to be at risk (unless you're extremely unlucky with a blood transfusion for example).
The point about husbands infecting wives is a good one but I don't see that vetting all tourists is going to make a noticeable difference (perhaps just test married males - that'd go down well
). I think husbands are more likely to visit other Asian and European countries for that kind of nocturnal amusement.
Can't imagine how you'd begin to check "working girls". That kind of system works well in somewhere like Amsterdam because they're working legally there.
And I think the worst thing about the idea is that it would introduce a degree of complacency with tourists which I suspect already exists amongst some expats - by getting past the HIV test they think they and other expats they meet are "safe". Hardly
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