YOU ARE HERE:
Guide to international entry restrictions for people with HIV published
German and Swiss HIV activists have developed a guide for HIV-positive travellers, providing details of the entry restrictions which some countries place on HIV-positive individuals. Written and researched by Karl Lemmen and Peter Wiessner from the German AIDS Federation and David Haerry of AIDS Info Docu Schweiz, the guide is called Quick Reference: Travel and Residence Regulations for People with HIV and AIDS 2005. It can accessed on the website of the International Lesbian and Gay Association (ILGA), here.
Restrictions on entry and residence for HIV-positive individuals differ between countries and can change quickly and with very little notice, and the latest edition of this quick reference guide has been updated to reflect recent changes. It draws on official information provided by embassies as well as that gleaned from the first-hand experiences of HIV-positive travellers. There is a large section on travel to the US, which is one of the few countries (along with Saudi Arabia, China, Russia, and Iraq) that forbids entry to people with HIV for even short stays. The guide explains the circumstances in which HIV-positive individuals can obtain a special visa waiver allowing them to legally travel to the US. However, as the authors recognise, many HIV-positive people travel to the US without declaring their health status, and the authors explain the possible consequences of this and some of the steps that HIV-positive people take to circumvent US immigration law. The authors stress that such behaviour is illegal and could lead to deportation and future ineligibility for entry to the US.
NAM recently updated a brief summary of the individual restrictions which countries place on entry and residence for foreigners with HIV. It is included in the updated edition of Living with HIV and can be read here.
Restrictions on entry and residence for HIV-positive individuals differ between countries and can change quickly and with very little notice, and the latest edition of this quick reference guide has been updated to reflect recent changes. It draws on official information provided by embassies as well as that gleaned from the first-hand experiences of HIV-positive travellers. There is a large section on travel to the US, which is one of the few countries (along with Saudi Arabia, China, Russia, and Iraq) that forbids entry to people with HIV for even short stays. The guide explains the circumstances in which HIV-positive individuals can obtain a special visa waiver allowing them to legally travel to the US. However, as the authors recognise, many HIV-positive people travel to the US without declaring their health status, and the authors explain the possible consequences of this and some of the steps that HIV-positive people take to circumvent US immigration law. The authors stress that such behaviour is illegal and could lead to deportation and future ineligibility for entry to the US.
NAM recently updated a brief summary of the individual restrictions which countries place on entry and residence for foreigners with HIV. It is included in the updated edition of Living with HIV and can be read here.
aidsmap resources
Adherence news
- One in five patients at London clinic are lost to follow-up and do not attend elsewhere in the UK
- Men more likely to drop out of clinic care than women in western Kenya
- Earlier ART benefits HIV/TB co-infected patients in Iran; Argentinian study yields uncertain results
Africa news
- 'Hidden epidemic' of HIV amongst African migrants in the United States
- Albendazole treatment of helminth co-infection in Kenyan HIV patients raises CD4 counts
- Justice Edwin Cameron calls for a campaign against 'misguided criminal laws and prosecutions'
Eastern Europe and Russia news
- Criminal HIV transmission and exposure laws spreading around the world ‘like a virus’
- Anti-HIV treatment provided to 3 million in poorer countries by end of 2007
- 2010 International AIDS Conference set for Vienna, with Eastern Europe focus
Latin America news
- Immigration and prevention: the effect of migration on risk behaviour
- Treatment outcomes in Latin America, China and Botswana: successes and shortfalls
- World AIDS conference comes to Latin America
Middle East news
- Justice Edwin Cameron calls for a campaign against 'misguided criminal laws and prosecutions'
- Half of all new HIV infections could be averted if proven prevention efforts expanded
- Roche agrees to temporary suspension of nelfinavir's (Viracept) European license - updated
