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Sexual
Health > HIV
& STD Testing Resources
There are multiple places
available in Yakima for HIV/AIDS
& STD testing. The Yakima
Health District does provide
HIV testing, but does not
have an STD clinic. Please
see definitions of confidential
and anonymous below.
| Clinic |
Fee |
Parent
Permission Needed? |
Confidential
or Anonymous |
Yakima
Health District (Weds
10-4, closed 12:30-1:30
for lunch, and by appt)
MaryLou
Briceno 249-6518 Carlos Contreras 249-6559
|
HIV
Testing Only for high
risk individuals
Free |
NO* |
Anonymous & Confidential |
New
Hope Clinic (part of
YVFWC)
Yakima
453-7144
|
HIV
Testing Only
STD Testing
only for established
patients of New Hope
HIV
Testing Sliding Scale |
NO* |
Confidential
or Anonymous |
YVFWC
Yakima
248-3334
Toppenish 865-5600
Grandview 882-3444
|
Sliding |
NO* |
Confidential |
|
Planned
Parenthood
Yakima (1117 Tieton Dr)
248-3625
Sunnyside 837-6979
Ellensburg 925-7113
|
STD
testing on sliding scale
$50.00 HIV testing flat
rate
|
NO* |
Confidential
or Anonymous |
Yakama
Indian Health
Toppenish
865-2102
|
Patients
must be eligible for Indian
Health Services |
NO* |
Confidential |
|
Yakima
Neighborhood Health
Yakima
454-4143
Sunnyside 837-8200
|
sliding fee scale |
NO* |
Confidential |
*People age 14 & older do not need parent/guardian consent for HIV/STI testing. Age of consent Revised Code of Washington |
Pros
and Cons of Anonymous vs.
Confidential Testing
This
information copied directly
from Seattle-King
County Public Health HIV/AIDS
Program.
Clinics
that provide health care must
keep a unique, personal and
ongoing record for each client
so that new health information
can be added and compared
with earlier findings. The
HIV/AIDS Program of Public
Health - Seattle & King
County offers two choices
for obtaining HIV counseling
& testing: anonymous registration
or confidential registration.
This information sheet further
describes these two options
to help you decide which to
choose.
Anonymous
testing
In
this option, no personal identifying
information is collected and
you are registered under a
unique code that you can re-create
each time you visit the clinic.
Benefits
of anonymous testing:
If
you test HIV+ you can not be
reported as a case of HIV
to public health staff at
this time.
There is no official record
of your being tested for HIV;
thus, partners, insurance
carriers, employers, landlords,
the government, etc cannot
ever obtain this information.
Drawbacks
of anonymous testing:
Without
your name and phone number,
we will not be able to contact
you. Thus, you might fail
to learn of test results,
about of new treatment or
research opportunities, and
we would not be able to remind
you to return for visits.
Confidential
testing
In
this option, you provide Public
Health with your name, address,
and other relevant information.
In Washington State, confidential
records about HIV, sexually
transmitted diseases, drug
abuse, and mental illness
are under stricter protections
than other medical records,
and are not released without
your written permission. At
the HIV/AIDS Program, confidential
records are also kept under
a special security system,
using your mother's maiden
name. Thus, even our laboratory
will not know your real name
or other identifying information.
Benefits
of confidential testing:
This
option allows us to contact
you, if necessary. This could
ensure that you 1) get important
lab test results, 2) are reminded
to return for your next vaccine
dose, 3) are notified about
new tests, treatments, research,
and other opportunities. If
you need your name to be on
your test result (e.g., for
travel or court-ordered testing),
this is the only option.
Drawbacks
of confidential testing:
If
you should test HIV+, state
regulations (adopted 9/99)
require that we report your
HIV infection to public health
staff. However, the names
of people with HIV are kept
only for 90 days; then they
are converted to codes and
the names are shredded. Your
HIV status is not released
to your insurance company,
employers, or anyone else.
Although
we have never been forced
to release medical information
to others without patient
permission, there is a slight
chance that we could be forced
to release information about
you in a legal proceeding,
potentially causing you harm.
Last
Updated
Wednesday, December 30, 2009 1:47 PM
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