Published: March 11, 2010
AHF Files Appeal in 'STDs in Porn' Lawsuit Against L.A. County Dept. of Public Health
LOS ANGELES - (BUSINESS WIRE) - AIDS
Healthcare Foundation (AHF) will host a media availability
today, Thursday, March 11th to discuss its
filing of an appeal in its lawsuit against the Los Angeles County
Department of Public Health (DPH) to require condom use or other
reasonable steps to protect actors in the production of pornography in
Los Angeles County. AHF filed the appeal with the California Second
Appellate District (Appellate Case No: pending) Thursday morning.
AHF's lawsuit, which was first filed in Superior Court of California,
County of Los Angeles (Case No.: BS121665), in July 2009, sought a Writ
of Mandate "compelling the Los Angeles County Department of Public
Health to discharge its ministerial and non-discretionary statutory duty
to combat an acknowledged epidemic of sexually transmitted diseases
stemming from production of hardcore pornography in Los Angeles County."
The suit was subsequently dismissed in late December.
AHF had filed the lawsuit after exhausting all other methods to compel
the County to fulfill its obligation to protect the public's health in
the wake of the revelation last June that an actress working in the
adult film business had tested positive for HIV. At that time, AHF had
urged the County to better monitor HIV and STD prevention in the
region's adult film industry-and require condom useâor to shut down porn
sets.
"We are appealing the dismissal of this lawsuit in order to continue to
try to compel the Department of Public Health to fulfill its
responsibility to try and control the spread of STDs in LA
County-particularly in a commercial venue. Despite the responsibility of
this public trust, and a full eight months after an outbreak of a
potentially lethal virus-HIVâin the porn industry, the County has simply
not taken the steps necessary to address this serious public health
threat," said Michael Weinstein, President of AIDS Healthcare
Foundation. "As an HIV and STD medical provider, it is our obligation to
pursue County action on this issue, which goes beyond just the recent
HIV outbreak and includes an epidemic of thousands of STD cases in the
porn industry-an epidemic virtually ignored by the County Dept. of
Public Health."
Since the June 2009 reporting of the latest HIV outbreak-and the
subsequent report by the LA Times that as many as 22 porn
performers may have tested positive over the last five years-no action
has been taken by the County to halt the spread of STDs on LA porn sets
or to conduct the proper and legally required public health follow-up
with those thought to be infected.
The fact that the DPH is aware of the ongoing pervasive sexually
transmitted disease crisis in LA's pornography industry is well
documented. DPH has cited numerous figures confirming an STD epidemic
among performers in adult films, including the fact that performers in
hardcore pornography are ten times more likely to be
infected with a sexually transmitted disease than members of the
population at large.
According to figures cited by DPH, there were 2,013 documented cases of
Chlamydia among LA porn performers between 2003 and 2007. In the same
period, 965 cases of gonorrhea were documented. Many performers suffer
multiple infections. In the period April 2004 to March 2008 there have
been 2,847 STD infections diagnosed among 1,884 performers in the
hardcore industry in LA County. DPH attributes the epidemic of sexually
transmitted diseases in the porn industry to a lack of protective
equipment for partners, including condoms. The agency recommends condoms
be used during production, but has never taken steps to ensure their
use, or to protect the performers who are essentially required to
endanger their health in order to remain employed.
"By recommending-but not requiringâcondom use on porn film sets, the
County is basically abdicating its responsibility to perform its main
function-which is to protect the public health," said Whitney
Engeran-Cordova, Director of AIDS Healthcare Foundation's Public
Health Division. "Thousands of STDs could be prevented in Los Angeles
County with the mandated use of condoms on porn sets."
AHF's initial lawsuit sought a Writ of Mandate "...directing DPH to
enforce California Health and Safety Code sections 120575 and 120175 by
requiring all performers to use condoms in the making of hardcore
pornography, or alternatively taking any and all other reasonable steps
necessary to stem the spread of sexually transmitted diseases in the
production of pornography in Los Angeles County."
"Despite a duty to take all reasonable measures necessary to prevent
transmission of these diseases, LA public health officials have done
little or nothing to combat this known, serious health threat to the
people of Los Angeles County. Through this appeal, we are seeking to
legally compel County officials to do what they have been unwilling or
unable to do," said Brian Chase, Assistant General Counsel for
AIDS Healthcare Foundation. "Not only is the County Department of Public
Health in violation of the California Health and Safety Code, but the
agency's inaction is needlessly placing thousands of people at risk of
disease."
AHF has previously sought remedy for public health issues through the
legal system and succeeded. In late 2008, in response to an AHF lawsuit
filed in Superior Court of California County of Los Angeles, a judge
ordered California's Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) to
implement a landmark 2002 law intended to extend Medi-Cal (Medicaid)
coverage to HIV-positive Californians. The Court ruled that the state's
Department of Health Care Services (DHCS) "...arbitrarily failed to meet
its statutory duties..." in implementing the 2002 legislation.
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All Day Media Availability:
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Michael Weinstein, President, AIDS Healthcare Foundation
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Office: (323) 860-5300, Mobile: (323) 810-1238
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Brian Chase, Assistant General Counsel, AIDS Healthcare
Foundation
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Office: (323) 860-5223, Mobile: (323) 208-1289
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AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) is the largest global AIDS
organization. AHF currently provides medical care and/or services to
more than 130,000 individuals in 22 countries worldwide in the US,
Africa, Latin America/Caribbean and the Asia Pacific Region. www.aidshealth.org

AIDS Healthcare Foundation
Ged Kenslea
Telephone: 323-308-1833
Mobile:
323-791-5526
gedk@aidshealth.org
or
Lori
Yeghiayan
Telephone: 323-308-1834
Mobile: 323-377-4312
loriy@aidshealth.org
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