Doe v. Roe

139 Misc. 2d 209, 526 N.Y.S.2d 718, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 66
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 14, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 139 Misc. 2d 209 (Doe v. Roe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Roe, 139 Misc. 2d 209, 526 N.Y.S.2d 718, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 66 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Kristin Booth Glen, J.

This motion brought pursuant to CPLR 3121 raises an important question not previously addressed in any written or reported decision concerning the obligation of a parent seeking to retain custody of her/his child to submit to a compul[210]*210sory test for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). In addition to the general questions which apply in determining CPLR 3121 motions, this application presents issues of privacy, public policy and Fourth Amendment rights. Further, the special characteristics of AIDS and AIDS testing, the potential stigmatization of persons identified as suffering from AIDS or infected with the so-called AIDS virus, and other detriments of nonconsensual mandatory testing for this dread disease suggest that a much stricter standard than materiality and relevancy should be employed where AIDS testing is at issue.

To place the issues in context, a brief summary of the facts may be useful.

FACTS

Respondent father is the present and long-term custodian of two minor children. Petitioners, the maternal grandparents, have obtained certain information, otherwise inadmissible, that respondent has told various persons that he is suffering from AIDS. When asked on the stand, in the course of the custody hearing, whether he had in fact made such statements or whether he suffered from AIDS, the respondent asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege. Based on this assertion of privilege, I drew a negative inference as permitted by law.

Thereafter, petitioners moved for an order compelling the respondent to submit to a physical examination, specifically "an examination to test for AIDS”. The motion did not indicate whether the "test” required was a general physical examination which might indicate that respondent was actually suffering from AIDS, or a blood test to determine whether he was seropositive for the HIV antibody. Respondent opposes any blood test, although he consents to undergoing a physical examination. The question is, therefore, what standard must be met, or what showing made before an involuntary AIDS test can be compelled. Before this question can be addressed, the present level of knowledge concerning AIDS and AIDS testing, as well as special problems such testing raises, relevant case law and clearly expressed public policy must all be reviewed and considered.

THE PRESENT MEDICAL UNDERSTANDING OF AIDS AND HIV-SEROPOSITIVITY.

AIDS is the clinical manifestation of a dysfunction of the [211]*211human immune system caused or at least widely thought to be caused by a recently discovered virus. (Logallo et al., Frequent Detection and Isolation of Cytopathic Retro Viruses [HTLV-II] from Patients with AIDS and at Risk for AIDS, 224 Sci 500 [May 1984].) The AIDS virus has received several names: Human T-Lymphotrophic Virus Type III (HTLV-III); Lymphadenopathy-Associated Virus (LAV); AIDS-Associated Retro Virus (ARV); and, most recently, Human Immuno Deficiency Virus (HIV). (Coffin et al., Human Immuno Deficiency Viruses [letter], 232 Sci 697 [May 1986] [proposing HIV terminology].)

Persons who are infected with the HIV virus fall into three categories. The first, or what is commonly referred to as AIDS, 'is the most severe form of the infection, and most victims of the disease die within two years. It is characterized by a breakdown of the immunological system and the presence of one or more opportunistic infections such as Kaposi’s sarcoma and Pneumocystis Carinii pneumonia. The second possible form of infection is AIDS-Related Complex (ARC), a milder degree of immuno deficiency characterized by a number of symptoms including swollen lymph nodes, persistent fever, fatigúemete. The third and most common form of infection is asymptomatic, which results in no abnormal infections. There is no certainty that persons in the third category will ever develop either ARC or AIDS itself, although it is predicted that some 25% to 50% of persons infected with the virus will develop AIDS within 5 to 10 years of the initial infection. (Institute of Med, Natl Academy of Sci, Confronting AIDS: Directions for Public Health, Health Care and Research, at 91 [1986].)

As of November 9, 1987, the total reported number of persons with AIDS (that is,. the most virulent form of the disease) in the United States reached 44,795, over half of whom have died. (Federal Center for Disease Control [CDC], Weekly Surveillance Report-United States AIDS Program, Nov. 9, 1987.) The group of persons who are infected with the HIV virus but who are suffering neither from AIDS nor from ARC, commonly referred to "seropositives” in the United States, is estimated to be between 1 and lVi million. (Public Health Service Plan for Prevention and Control of AIDS Virus: Report of Coolfont Conference, at 4 [June 4-6, 1986], reprinted in principal part in 101 Pub Health Rep 341 [July-Aug. 1986].) According to an estimate of Dr. James Curran at the Center for Disease Control, of men between the ages of 20 and 50, [212]*212approximately 1 in 30 carries the virus. (AIDS: Statistics But No,Answers, 236 Sci 1423, 1425 [June 12, 1987].)

MEDICAL ASPECTS OF AIDS TESTING

To speak of an examination for AIDS, therefore, is to propose a number of entirely distinct possibilities. First, an individual could be subject to a general physical examination which, if s/he were suffering from full-blown AIDS would likely reveal one of the characteristic opportunistic infections. Second, the symptoms of ARC might also be apparent in a general physical examination, although confirmation of the disease and the cause of the symptoms might be dependent on a blood test. The third, and the most commonly used notion of an "AIDS test”, is a blood test which simply shows whether the individual tested is seropositive for the HIV antibody.

Demonstration of the extraordinarily high level of false-negatives and positives from the original AIDS blood test has led to the standard use of a two-part process. The Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) test is the initial screening test.1 The second step of the testing process is the confirmatory test; the primary confirmatory test now in use is the Western Blot Test.2 Even this two-part testing protocol may, however, produce errors.

The test may register negative in the early stages of viral infection before the antibodies have been sufficiently mobilized to show up as positive on an antibody test. This incubation period — the time between infection and antibody reaction— usually lasts about six weeks but may be as long as six [213]*213months or more.3 False-positives can also occur.4 5Finally, even these accuracy rates assume that the test is performed properly. The accuracy rates of commercial laboratories offering the test vary widely, including up to 20% false-positivity rates on pretested samples.®

A blood test is, therefore, no guarantee either that the person tested has or does not have AIDS or the HIV antibody. Besides these technical difficulties, however, nonvoluntary AIDS testing presents a number of problems which have been recognized by authorities involved in the field.

SPECIAL PROBLEMS OF AIDS TESTING

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Bluebook (online)
139 Misc. 2d 209, 526 N.Y.S.2d 718, 1988 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-roe-nysupct-1988.