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Old 07-23-2007, 06:13 PM
UGAalum94 UGAalum94 is offline
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Originally Posted by Munchkin03 View Post
It was a swimming pool in an RV park--probably not the most enlightened characters around.
Agreed, and that's part of why I think the distinction about asking for the letter might have more validity than it would someplace where people would probably know it was low/no risk, but used it to keep the kid out of the water.
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Old 07-23-2007, 06:29 PM
AKA_Monet AKA_Monet is offline
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Oh the irony...

The Chlorine KILLS HIV... That is 20 year old data. The baby poopin' all over the place is probably on all kinna meds still is cleaner before and after the Chlorine wash killing the HIV... Moreover, I would be worried about all the Chlorine affecting the baby!!!

And Onetime...

I agree. Folks need to be worried about the folks who don't know that they are infected with ANYTHING than who has a confirmed disease.

There are people OUT THERE ASYMPTOMATIC that have diseases WORSE than HIV...
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Old 07-23-2007, 06:36 PM
UGAalum94 UGAalum94 is offline
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Originally Posted by AKA_Monet View Post
Oh the irony...

The Chlorine KILLS HIV... That is 20 year old data. The baby poopin' all over the place is probably on all kinna meds still is cleaner before and after the Chlorine wash killing the HIV... Moreover, I would be worried about all the Chlorine affecting the baby!!!

And Onetime...

I agree. Folks need to be worried about the folks who don't know that they are infected with ANYTHING than who has a confirmed disease.

There are people OUT THERE ASYMPTOMATIC that have diseases WORSE than HIV...
I think that's why we promote the idea of universal precautions rather than only precautions with known status right?

I think I'm going to regret asking this, but what do you have in mind as worse diseases?

You mean like something more easily communicable or like how long hepatitis can live outside the body vs. HIV or like drug resistant TB jackasses on airplanes? You have introduced the idea that I need to get phobic about more things. What are they?
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Old 07-23-2007, 06:54 PM
AKA_Monet AKA_Monet is offline
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Originally Posted by AlphaGamUGAAlum View Post
I think I'm going to regret asking this, but what do you have in mind as worse diseases?

You mean like something more easily communicable like drug resistant TB jackasses on airplanes? You have introduced the idea that I need to get phobic about more things. What are they?
Azzwipes that live in denial after the CDC medical doctors TOLD him point blank and now folks in France have +TB tests... The treatments isn't a joke either. They are not pills. They are INJECTIONS!!!

There is the Norovirus--Norwalk on the ships. They STILL DO NOT KNOW HOW THESE THINGS GET COMMUNICABLE!!!

And all the crap that is getting "genetically engineered" these days... Well, I know people too... And some of them DO illegal activities. A few of THEM showed up to my class ONE DAY in 1998... I was teaching the BIO101 that teaches folks how to grow Escherichia coli. At this point, it is semantics how these things get grown...

Not to be all conpiratory: But do you REALLY THINK that the Spinach contamination of last year and the Current Botulism contamination this year is REALLY ALL THAT MUCH OF AN ACCIDENT? Like, OOPS? My bad!

There is some crap out there now, I think the Russians are encountering it, that the ONLY WAY to remove the infestation is by 18,0000 degrees and rising...

What can you do? Not much but keep yourself healthy. Learn basic survival tactics and CPR. Emergency prepare yourself. Get I2 pills for water. Know some basic wound maintenence care. Combined, I think my husband and I will live a week with drinkable water until help arrives--if...

These diseases travel with animals including humans and bugs. They can be tropical or not. You just have to know how to protect yourself...
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Old 07-24-2007, 09:19 AM
DaemonSeid DaemonSeid is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AKA_Monet View Post
Azzwipes that live in denial after the CDC medical doctors TOLD him point blank and now folks in France have +TB tests... The treatments isn't a joke either. They are not pills. They are INJECTIONS!!!

There is the Norovirus--Norwalk on the ships. They STILL DO NOT KNOW HOW THESE THINGS GET COMMUNICABLE!!!

And all the crap that is getting "genetically engineered" these days... Well, I know people too... And some of them DO illegal activities. A few of THEM showed up to my class ONE DAY in 1998... I was teaching the BIO101 that teaches folks how to grow Escherichia coli. At this point, it is semantics how these things get grown...

Not to be all conpiratory: But do you REALLY THINK that the Spinach contamination of last year and the Current Botulism contamination this year is REALLY ALL THAT MUCH OF AN ACCIDENT? Like, OOPS? My bad!

There is some crap out there now, I think the Russians are encountering it, that the ONLY WAY to remove the infestation is by 18,0000 degrees and rising...

What can you do? Not much but keep yourself healthy. Learn basic survival tactics and CPR. Emergency prepare yourself. Get I2 pills for water. Know some basic wound maintenence care. Combined, I think my husband and I will live a week with drinkable water until help arrives--if...

These diseases travel with animals including humans and bugs. They can be tropical or not. You just have to know how to protect yourself...
2 comments on that... I get really concerned as it seems every other month we hear that a portion of our food supply is contaminated and I keep saying this isn't an accident, this is bilogical warfare

The other thing is a science experiment I had in microbiology when I was ajunior in high school...my teacher, just to show how unclean certain things was had as take an incubation dish and get samples from different parts of the schhol...and then shake ur hands with 5 people......well one of the people we all shook hands with, he always had sweaty palms and wasn't known to be the best hygienic person around.... imagine our surprise and disgust when 4 days later 5 of those incubation dishes turned up with fruit fly larvae.....if that doesn't teach you to wash ur hands...i don't know what will
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Old 07-23-2007, 07:49 PM
Drolefille Drolefille is offline
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Originally Posted by AlphaGamUGAAlum View Post
Agreed, and that's part of why I think the distinction about asking for the letter might have more validity than it would someplace where people would probably know it was low/no risk, but used it to keep the kid out of the water.
When i'm on my vacation I'll have easy access to a doctor's note for my hypothetical HIV+ kid.
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Old 07-23-2007, 09:26 PM
UGAalum94 UGAalum94 is offline
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Originally Posted by Drolefille View Post
When i'm on my vacation I'll have easy access to a doctor's note for my hypothetical HIV+ kid.
You know the more I think about it, your sarcastic statement would actually be the truth. If either of us really had an HIV positive kid, you or I would travel with all kinds of information and contact info for our doctors (or the doctors the kid saw through the state medical system for foster kids), and we'd also know not to tell people stuff who didn't really need to know it because we know that many people are jerks and we'd be setting the kid up for trouble. The fact that they thought it would be no big deal is a further indication of how saintlike these folks are. (Seriously!)

And as far as the RV-park-running-redneck guy goes, getting word from the health department might put his mind at ease. I don't think that he expected it to cost anything. He specifically mentions the public health department in the article.

If you were hypothetically ill informed and ran a pool, which side would you err on: inconveniencing one family or contaminating your pool? Is the burden* on you to allow someone to swim IN YOUR POOL* until you have proof they are unsafe*?

Here's the quote: "'We weren't sure if somebody could get the virus if the child upchucked on them or from blood or what," said Ken Zadnichek, the park's owner. "We didn't know what the risk was. That's why we asked for something from their doctor or the county health department.'

Dick Glover said the request for a doctor's note made it clear Caleb was unwelcome."

Does that sound like a ban to you the way people usually use the worded ban?

*as it turns out, with HIV, yes you do if your pool is generally open to the public. The burden for knowing what you have to permit will rest with you.

Last edited by UGAalum94; 07-25-2007 at 06:32 PM. Reason: added 1st paragraph and quote
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Old 07-24-2007, 01:40 AM
Drolefille Drolefille is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by AlphaGamUGAAlum View Post
You know the more I think about it, your sarcastic statement would actually be the truth. If either of us really had an HIV positive kid, you or I would travel with all kinds of information and contact info for our doctors (or the doctors the kid saw through the state medical system for foster kids), and we'd also know not to tell people stuff who didn't really need to know it because we know that many people are jerks and we'd be setting the kid up for trouble. The fact that they thought it would be no big deal is a further indication of how saintlike these folks are. (Seriously!)

And as far as the RV-park-running-redneck guy goes, getting word from the health department might put his mind at ease. I don't think that he expected it to cost anything. He specifically mentions the public health department in the article.

If you were hypothetically ill informed and ran a pool, which side would you err on: inconveniencing one family or contaminating your pool? Is the burden on you to allow someone to swim IN YOUR POOL until you have proof they are unsafe?

Here's the quote: "'We weren't sure if somebody could get the virus if the child upchucked on them or from blood or what," said Ken Zadnichek, the park's owner. "We didn't know what the risk was. That's why we asked for something from their doctor or the county health department.'

Dick Glover said the request for a doctor's note made it clear Caleb was unwelcome."

Does that sound like a ban to you the way people usually use the worded ban?
It is unreasonable to make any kid, even one with a disease, carry proof that they can go to public areas. Contact information, emergency information, prescription information is NOT the same thing. Along with my note to go to the pool, I need a note to eat in a public place, one to use the same restrooms (what if I PUKE!), one to walk on the beach, one to walk down a public street (where I could easily trip and scrape my knee). It's stupid.

The rules for taking care of biohazards (HIV+ or not) in a public pool area are sufficient to protect people from HIV. If the kid puked, you would treat it the same as if ANY kid puked. If I was "hypothetically ill informed" I would be a moron. If I ran a pool I'd know these things.

They're adopting (or have now adopted) this kid. They know what is reasonable. (Which suggests that carrying a doctor's note for the pool is NOT).

Yes, it sounds like my kid's (hypothetical) presence wouldn't be welcome there. If they're concerned about it, they can call the health department. Refusing service based on HIV status is just wrong.
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Old 07-24-2007, 02:02 AM
AKA_Monet AKA_Monet is offline
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I know this is a crazy hypothetical, but what if they took the kid to the beach that had sharks? Would the sharks know of the HIV status or care?

But that's how my sick and twisted mind works...

I doubt it, because aside from the fact the kid is ~2 years old, the buffer capacity and osmolarity as well as osmolality of sea water would not allow the virus to live that long in that kind of environment...

If the HIV+ person had weeping bloodied wounds, the sharks would taste it, but probably would not eat it because it is thought they can detect these kinds of things. Moreover, sharks have a very different immune system than mammals, they do not make antibodies like mammals do.

And shark behavior is fundamentally a different kind of social system from what is identifiable. Why is this important? Because sharks have evolved and lived on Earth for millions of years. It makes it relevant in understanding how these animals live for so long can give us humans an inkling as to how we can live as long...

I dunno: swimming and summer always makes me think of La Jolla Shores or Windansea, California...
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Old 07-24-2007, 10:55 PM
UGAalum94 UGAalum94 is offline
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Originally Posted by Drolefille View Post
It is unreasonable to make any kid, even one with a disease, carry proof that they can go to public areas. Contact information, emergency information, prescription information is NOT the same thing. Along with my note to go to the pool, I need a note to eat in a public place, one to use the same restrooms (what if I PUKE!), one to walk on the beach, one to walk down a public street (where I could easily trip and scrape my knee). It's stupid.

The rules for taking care of biohazards (HIV+ or not) in a public pool area are sufficient to protect people from HIV. If the kid puked, you would treat it the same as if ANY kid puked. If I was "hypothetically ill informed" I would be a moron. If I ran a pool I'd know these things.

They're adopting (or have now adopted) this kid. They know what is reasonable. (Which suggests that carrying a doctor's note for the pool is NOT).

Yes, it sounds like my kid's (hypothetical) presence wouldn't be welcome there. If they're concerned about it, they can call the health department. Refusing service based on HIV status is just wrong.
Was he truly in a public place the same way he would be in the things that you listed?

You'd think anyone running a pool would know how do deal with anyone's bodily fluids safely, but it doesn't appear that this guy did.

I don't want to see the kid get banned from doing anything, and I'd like to think that everyone is informed and reasonable about HIV, but it's not always the case.

Telling strangers that the kid is HIV positive is probably not a good strategy if you want him to face as little discrimination as possible, whether you or I want that to be true or not. So I'm not as convinced as you are that they do know what's reasonable.

Again, I don't want to see this kid restricted from doing anything. But he has a deadly blood-born disease, and if you insist on telling people that, don't be surprised when they want to reassured that he's not a risk to them before they let him do stuff. Yes, it'd be better world if everyone equally carried the burden of being knowledgeable about HIV transmission and safety, but they don't. And if it's your kid with the disease, you'd be better off not always counting on rednecks being well-informed and sensitive about things they don't understand. (I'm not saying the parents are more at fault for what happened as much as I'm trying to say that it wasn't totally reasonable to do what they did. They were wildly optimistic about other people's knowledge and good will.)

(Does anyone know if by law the RV park pool owner has to let him swim? Is HIV a kind of protected status* in Alabama that would guarantee you the right not to be discriminated against legally?* Ethically and morally, I'll go along with those of you who think he should be free to swim there, but is he entitled to legally since it's not a publicly owned facility?)
*The answer is yes; it's treat as a disability.

Last edited by UGAalum94; 07-25-2007 at 06:34 PM.
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Old 07-24-2007, 11:08 PM
Rudey Rudey is offline
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Old 07-24-2007, 11:39 PM
Drolefille Drolefille is offline
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Originally Posted by AlphaGamUGAAlum View Post
Was he truly in a public place the same way he would be in the things that you listed?

You'd think anyone running a pool would know how do deal with anyone's bodily fluids safely, but it doesn't appear that this guy did.

I don't want to see the kid get banned from doing anything, and I'd like to think that everyone is informed and reasonable about HIV, but it's not always the case.

Telling strangers that the kid is HIV positive is probably not a good strategy if you want him to face as little discrimination as possible, whether you or I want that to be true or not. So I'm not as convinced as you are that they do know what's reasonable.

Again, I don't want to see this kid restricted from doing anything. But he has a deadly blood-born disease, and if you insist on telling people that, don't be surprised when they want to reassured that he's not a risk to them before they let him do stuff. Yes, it'd be better world if everyone equally carried the burden of being knowledgeable about HIV transmission and safety, but they don't. And if it's your kid with the disease, you'd be better off not always counting on rednecks being well-informed and sensitive about things they don't understand. (I'm not saying the parents are more at fault for what happened as much as I'm trying to say that it wasn't totally reasonable to do what they did. They were wildly optimistic about other people's knowledge and good will.)

(Does anyone know if by law the RV park pool owner has to let him swim? Is HIV a kind of protected status in Alabama that would guarantee you the right not to be discriminated against legally? Ethically and morally, I'll go along with those of you who think he should be free to swim there, but is he entitled to legally since it's not a publicly owned facility?)
His inability to deal with bodily fluids is his own error that needs correcting. He should not be running a pool if he doesn't know what to do when a kid pees in it or cuts himself. He has no idea if Little Jimmy in the pool has HIV or Hepititis or the bubonic plague, he needs to treat every kid's blood as if it were HIV+. This being the case, it shouldn't be a problem for an HIV+ kid to be in the pool.
A restaurant is a comparable public/private area. It is private property but public space, as is a restroom in a store or restaurant. Requiring kids/parents to carry "notes" is stupid. While a person may have the right to refuse to serve you, you have the right to go to court and/or the media and complain. Public opinion and/or the court will decide who was right.
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Old 07-24-2007, 11:55 PM
UGAalum94 UGAalum94 is offline
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So you don't know about it legally either?

I agree with you that being required to carry notes would be stupid. But carrying information to provide to people might also be easier because so far we haven't managed to get rid of all the stupid people.

I agree with you about the pool owner and universal precautions. It's a little scary to think about how he cleans up usually.

They are trying it in the court of public opinion and I think they'll win with people who aren't using that pool.

But I still don't think what that guy did amounts to a ban.

And I still think the parents will likely face more unnecessary uphill struggles if they announce the kid's HIV status to people who don't really need to know it.

Imagine in all the examples that you gave earlier, the person is shouting out, "I have HIV." "Hey, waitress thanks for bring me silverware; I have HIV." "Hey is this seat on the bus taken?; I have HIV." "Can I use your bathroom; I have HIV?" Isn't the person unnecessarily setting himself or herself up for a lot of junk that could be avoided?
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Old 07-24-2007, 09:03 AM
ForeverRoses ForeverRoses is offline
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Originally Posted by AlphaGamUGAAlum View Post

Here's the quote: "'We weren't sure if somebody could get the virus if the child upchucked on them or from blood or what," said Ken Zadnichek, the park's owner. "We didn't know what the risk was. That's why we asked for something from their doctor or the county health department.'
The fact that the trailer park owner actually said "upchucked"

The ban on the pool seems silly to me- Mr. Zadnichek needs to be better informed about how HIV is spread. What I don't get at all is the ban on the showers. The child wasn't going to be in the shower with lots of other people, so even if he did "upchuck", they would be able to clean the shower before anyone else would use it (I would hope that it would be disinfected no matter who was the "upchucker").
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Old 07-24-2007, 09:13 AM
AlwaysSAI AlwaysSAI is online now
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Simply stated, This makes me sick!

the HIV epidemic began more than 20 years ago and anyone who has not been living in a cave for the last 10 years knows the risk.

To Mr. RV Park owner- Go crawl back into your cave and don't come out until you have a doctor's note excusing your stupidity.
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