> Eventually it dawned on me that these blind blanket decisions are simply because these doctors don't know anything about a patient's personal life and what risky subpopulations they may or may not belong to.
The question is not which subpopulations the patient may belong to, but which ones they may have had contact with. It doesn't matter how well-off you are if you ate dinner last night in a restaurant where the staff cannot afford to be screened and treated for hepatitis. That particular transmission vector is more relevant to Hep A than Hep C, but the general point for public health policy at a high level is sound: you cannot ignore under-served populations that live amongst you, because people you don't care about can still get you sick. Yes, there are some nasty diseases that for now appear to be limited to only sexual and needle transmission, but we shouldn't shape our entire approach to public health around blaming the victims of those particular diseases.
The question is not which subpopulations the patient may belong to, but which ones they may have had contact with. It doesn't matter how well-off you are if you ate dinner last night in a restaurant where the staff cannot afford to be screened and treated for hepatitis. That particular transmission vector is more relevant to Hep A than Hep C, but the general point for public health policy at a high level is sound: you cannot ignore under-served populations that live amongst you, because people you don't care about can still get you sick. Yes, there are some nasty diseases that for now appear to be limited to only sexual and needle transmission, but we shouldn't shape our entire approach to public health around blaming the victims of those particular diseases.