Although morbidity among HIV/AIDS victims has decreased, the rate of new infections has remained steady for several years, substantially increasing the likelihood that this epidemic will continue and expand as a concern for social workers and their clientele, both of whom will need to be kept informed of the complex laws governing the milieu and the consequences of the disease. This is certainly the case with its spread throughout Asia and Africa.
In this new work, the author draws upon statutes and court decisions from across the United States to provide a comprehensive and current picture of the many facets of HIV/AIDS law, including health policy; confidentiality; privacy; bioethics; the workplace; and criminal law and corrections. The volume of legal, medical, social science, and popular literature pertaining to HIV/AIDS that has been published over the past two decades is staggering. Hence, any addition to this collection needs some justification. What Dickson offers is different from what has preceded. Rather than one more contribution to the extensive legal or social science literature, this book attempts to integrate the perspectives from two fields: law and social work. The hope is that this will give social workers, practitioners, and teachers a better understanding of one of the major issues that may face them in their work with patients and clients every day.
To date, although there is extensive HIV and AIDS-related literature in social work and the social sciences, it is primarily focused on social work practice issues. Where law has been introduced in these works, it often is narrow in focus and, given the rapid changes in the field, no longer up to date. This book does not purport to discuss all legal issues in all jurisdictions relating to HIV/AIDS, but rather to choose selectively those that have particular relevance for social work and social policy. The author has placed reliance on those published medical works cited with approval in the legal and social science literature. This is a seminal work on the relationship of law, medicine, and ethics.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Donald T. Dickson is professor in the School of Social Work at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, in New Brunswick.
“For social work practitioners who want a very general overview of how laws intersect with HIV/AIDS services, this excellent text provides just the kind of brief summary of laws that they will find useful. It encapsulates legal issues and gives guidance to trends in laws from a national perspective... What this text does well is to summarize general laws relative to various topics where social policy and social work practice intersects in the HIV/AIDS arena. It suggests that broader social policy (such as AIDS exceptionalism or public health protections) may guide the philosophy of the laws.”
—Ronald J. Mancoske, Journal of Sociology & Social Work
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
Shipping:
US$ 33.61
From Spain to U.S.A.
Seller: Iridium_Books, DH, SE, Spain
Hardcover. Condition: Good. 0202361276. Seller Inventory # 9780202361277
Quantity: 1 available