LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
No, she leaked it herself, by writing it in her prison diary.
Anything a person in cautional custody does or keeps in their cell is not private.
After it got seized, anyone from the prison personnel, or the private prosecution lawyers entourage (like Pacelli) could have given it to Fiorenza Sarzanini.
You state arbitrarily of medical/ethical guidelines with no backing. You have no clue to say anything was incorrect, even less to say it was against medical deontology (which is not the same thing as guidelines by the way, and this further shows your ignorance). She was given a false positive. For what we know, this could be a correct result delivered by following fully correct and ethical medical procedure.
Obviously I have the strongest doubts about this reconstruction, which seems to me quite made up, and looks more like a fictional travesty of what actually happens in such an occurrence. The patient is never asked to “write down the names of sexual partners”, even less to write all this information into a diary with full explanation. The patient only is suggested to contact previous partners at risk in order to communicate the warning.
The Capanne prison has a medical personnel of three appointed doctors and thirteen doctors working around 24/h in shifts, plus 9 paramedics. The names of all those doctors are known. If anyone of them ever orchestrated a deception or violated the patient’s rights this could have been easily addressed an found out: the doctor is known. And the doctor is a professional, there are organisms who could sanction any violation. Nobody had doubt on the doctor as far as I know and nobody (nor lawyer nor Amanda) ever complained with those organisms or about this doctor. Who are you to issue verdicts?
But even if the list were the result of a deception orchestrated with a conspiracy of police and doctors, even in this – absurd – case, still there would be no reason to think this could be done in order to produce a leakage. The only reason would have been investigative, to identify the names of Amanda’s lovers in the convincement that one of them was the murderer. Surely the compelling reason for such a conspiracy, for an investigator, could be only one: to secretly obtain names, not to leak them. The leakage could not possibly be the motive for the police to have these names, their interest would be obviously oriented toward Amanda’s partners to investigate them themselves, not to give them to the press.
That the list found its way into Italian media because it was part of a text in a diary speaking about her case, and everything like a diary written by a person in custody and under investigation in Italy always would find the way to the media. This is the rule, it is structural, with guilty, with innocents, this is just a factual media priviledge in investigations, this is no prosecution’s decision and has nothing to do with prosecution's nor investigators strategies.
Deontology is a philosophical approach to ethics based on adherence to rules - I'm not sure what it has to do with recommended ethical approaches to delivering HIV test results, but thanks for calling me ignorant anyhow
Plenty of information has been posted here before about ethical practices for delivering HIV test results. But here are some links. the first is a WHO paper on HIV testing and counselling in prisons and other closed settings:
http://www.who.int/hiv/pub/idu/tc_prison_tech_paper.pdf
It has some interesting things to say about confidentiality and counselling.
Here's what the US Center for Disease Control has to say about HIV testing and communication of results:
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5514a1.htm
Typically, two separate tests are done for the presence of HIV - ELISA and Western Blot. The ELISA test can throw up false positives, but the Western Blot test has a calculated false positive frequency of around 0.0004% in the general low-risk population:
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/280/12/1080
So another question is how and why Knox was told she was HIV positive in the first place, given that in fact she was not. Standard practice is to inform people of HIV-positive tests results only after the ELISA positive is confirmed by the Western Blot positive. So what happened in Knox's case?
So far as being asked to list sexual partners is concerned, I believe that Knox herself wrote that she was asked to do this by the prison's medical staff. Furthermore, it's in the UNAIDS guidelines on what to do if you are tested HIV-positive:
http://data.unaids.org/pub/FactSheet/2008/20080527_fastfacts_testing_en.pdf
which states that the person who is HIV-positive should try to "follow-up with HIV testing and counselling for partners and children". Obviously, a first step in this process would be to list previous sexual partners, together with whether "safe sex" was practised with these people, in order to determine which of Knox's previous partners might be at risk of being HIV-positive themselves. I would imagine that there might be an even greater need for Knox to write this information down for the authorities, since she was incarcerated and would not therefore be in a good position to contact these people herself.
And lastly, I'm not suggesting a "conspiracy" amongst medical doctors, prison officers and prosecutors, and nor am I stating anything with "certainty". What I am saying is that it appears Knox was given the devastating - but false - news that she was HIV-positive, and that this should not have happened owing to the extraordinarily low false positive rate for the Western Blot test in low-risk adults. And secondly, I'm saying that Knox's diary ended up in the media, and there had to be a mechanism for that to happen.