Section 7501 Of Chapter 1. General Provisions From California Penal Code >> Title 8. >> Part 3. >> Chapter 1.
7501
. In order to address the public health crisis described in
Section 7500, it is the intent of the Legislature to do all of the
following:
(a) Establish a procedure through which custodial and law
enforcement personnel are required to report certain situations and
may request and be granted a confidential test for HIV or for
hepatitis B or C of an inmate convicted of a crime, or a person
arrested or taken into custody, if the custodial or law enforcement
officer has reason to believe that he or she has come into contact
with the blood or semen of an inmate or in any other manner has come
into contact with the inmate in a way that could result in HIV
infection, or the transmission of hepatitis B or C, based on the
latest determinations and conclusions by the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention and the State Department of Public
Health on means for the transmission of AIDS or hepatitis B and C,
and if appropriate medical authorities, as provided in this title,
reasonably believe there is good medical reason for the test.
(b) Permit inmates to file similar requests stemming from contacts
with other inmates.
(c) Require that probation and parole officers be notified when an
inmate being released from incarceration is infected with AIDS or
hepatitis B or C, and permit these officers to notify certain persons
who will come into contact with the parolee or probationer, if
authorized by law.
(d) Authorize prison medical staff authorities to require tests of
a jail or prison inmate under certain circumstances, if they
reasonably believe, based upon the existence of supporting evidence,
that the inmate may be suffering from HIV infection or AIDS or
hepatitis B or C and is a danger to other inmates or staff.
(e) Require supervisory and medical personnel of correctional
institutions to which this title applies to notify staff if they are
coming into close and direct contact with persons in custody who have
tested positive or who have AIDS or hepatitis B or C, and provide
appropriate counseling and safety equipment.