LANSING, MICH. – Michigan’s health department is violating the legislative intent of an HIV-related statute – and maybe the law itself – by indefinitely collecting information on people who test for HIV at federally funded clinics, says a former state lawmaker, who helped pass sweeping health reforms in the wake of the AIDS epidemic.
Mich. HIV data collection violates intent of statute, says lawmaker who helped create law
News curated from other sources

Mexico: Baja California eliminates HIV Criminalisation from State Criminal Code
BC Congress eliminates crime of “danger of contagion”
October 5, 2025

Canada: Google refuses to suppress name-based search results in dismissed HIV criminalisation case
Google wants to keep HIV status of underage Canadian in search results
August 30, 2025

Canada: Reform of HIV criminalisation laws remains stalled amid political delays
Advocates against HIV criminalization decry Carney silence on reform Trudeau promised
August 24, 2025

US: Missouri prison system ends solitary confinement policy targeting people with HIV
A Woman With HIV Spent Six Years in Solitary. She Sued and Missouri Will Change Its Policy.
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US: Louisiana’s HIV laws lag behind HIV science
Louisiana upholds its HIV exposure law as other states change or repeal theirs
July 20, 2025
News by the HIV Justice Network


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