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- <text id=90TT1696>
- <title>
- June 25, 1990: Medical Progress -- Live! On CNN!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 25, 1990 Who Gives A Hoot?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ETHICS, Page 50
- Medical Progress--Live! On CNN!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>An experimental AIDS treatment tests the judgment of journalists
- </p>
- <p> AIDS patients who tuned in last Thursday to Cable News
- Network and several other TV news shows had reason to feel
- excited. Reporting live from Atlanta Hospital, a CNN
- correspondent described an operation in progress aimed at
- ridding a 37-year-old man, identified only as "Tony," of AIDS
- by heating his blood to 108 degrees F. Heightening the drama
- was the presence on camera of Carl Crawford, 33, an AIDS
- patient who had received the same treatment four months ago and
- whose symptoms had apparently disappeared.
- </p>
- <p> But there were some warning signals to alert the wary.
- First, results from the experimental procedure, performed by
- Drs. William Logan and Kenneth Alonso, had not yet been
- reviewed by other professionals or published in any medical
- journal. Crawford and Tony were the only patients who had ever
- undergone the blood-heating treatment. That is not a large
- enough group to draw any conclusions, and it is too soon to
- tell whether Tony will get better or worse. Finally, as CNN
- duly reported, Atlanta Hospital is on the verge of being shut
- down by the state of Georgia unless the facility can refute
- charges (unrelated to the Logan-Alonso experiment) that
- patients there have received poor care.
- </p>
- <p> What is a TV viewer, particularly one who has AIDS, to make
- of this story? Is the treatment a miracle cure? Or is it a
- mirage that cruelly raises the hopes of AIDS sufferers--the
- medical equivalent of cold fusion? No one, and certainly not
- journalists, can know the answers. The case illustrates the
- press's growing lack of restraint in medical coverage,
- especially where AIDS is concerned. CNN called the treatment
- "experimental and controversial," but by leading off newscasts
- with the story and cutting to the hospital for frequent live
- reports, the network was in effect trumpeting the blood-heating
- procedure as a major development. That outraged many medical
- experts. "This is turning a life-and-death issue into a media
- circus. Frankly, it makes me sick to my stomach," said Dr.
- Bernard Bihari, a New York City physician who has conducted
- trials of experimental AIDS drugs.
- </p>
- <p> The work done by Logan, a retired heart surgeon, and Alonso,
- a professor of pathology at Atlanta's Morehouse Medical School,
- started as an effort to treat Kaposi's sarcoma, a cancer common
- in AIDS patients that produces severe skin lesions. The doctors
- thought that heating a patient's blood might combat the cancer
- and possibly even kill the AIDS virus. During the procedure,
- called hyperthermia, blood is drawn from a vein in the groin,
- heated in a water bath and continuously recirculated into the
- body. In little more than an hour, the body's temperature
- reaches 108 degrees F, and it is kept there for an additional
- two hours. Crawford came through the operation with no ill
- effects, as did Tony--so far. Logan and Alonso were careful
- not to call their treatment a cure for AIDS. Said Logan at a
- press conference: "It may not be the total answer. We're not
- expecting that really."
- </p>
- <p> But last month Alonso thought the treatment was worth
- mentioning to WXIA-TV, Atlanta's NBC and CNN affiliate, which
- carried the story on May 25. Five days later, CNN broke the
- news nationally. Since then, it has been reported, sometimes
- skeptically, on local TV news shows around the U.S. and in such
- newspapers as the Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle and
- the Los Angeles Times.
- </p>
- <p> Only a few months ago, according to Crawford and his
- doctors, his body was covered with Kaposi's sarcoma lesions,
- but after the hyperthermia treatment, the sores vanished.
- Moreover, the doctors claim that his blood tests negative for
- the AIDS virus. In one of the early CNN reports, Crawford
- praised his "wonderful doctors. They can't say I'm cured, of
- course, you know, but I feel that I am cured. I really do."
- </p>
- <p> It is possible that Crawford was in fact helped by the
- treatment. Or it could be that he experienced an unexplained
- remission, perhaps aided by his new hopeful attitude. That is
- known as the placebo effect, and it has been observed in
- patients with many kinds of diseases, including AIDS. Dr.
- Sharilyn Stanley, an AIDS researcher at the National Institutes
- of Health, expressed doubts that hyperthermia could work. She
- cited studies showing that the AIDS virus can survive at
- temperatures up to 133 degrees F. Even if the virus has somehow
- been eradicated from Crawford's blood, it could still be in his
- bone marrow or other tissue and may re-emerge.
- </p>
- <p> The motives of Logan, Alonso and Atlanta Hospital are open
- to question. The small private institution has lined up three
- or four more AIDS patients for the treatment and plans to
- charge them $30,000 each. (The doctors have set up a foundation
- to subsidize patients who cannot pay the full amount.) But
- Logan and Alonso will have to find another place to work unless
- the hospital can thwart the move to revoke its license to
- operate. The state is investigating two recent deaths in the
- operating room.
- </p>
- <p> CNN defends its coverage of the blood-heating experiment.
- Said Steve Haworth, director of public relations: "We are
- making it very clear in our coverage how unproven [the
- procedure] is...We made it clear that only the patient
- himself was calling it a cure." Asked if the frequent live
- reporting from the hospital tended to hype the story, Haworth
- replied, "It depends on what is going on. We had no other
- breaking story during the day."
- </p>
- <p> On the air, the network noted that Tony had learned about
- the operation because of CNN's reporting. His treatment came
- soon after Janet Adkins committed suicide using a machine
- publicized on the Donahue show. If people are relying on TV to
- help them make life-and-death medical decisions, they are
- asking for big trouble.
- </p>
- <p>By Charles P. Alexander. Reported by Tom Curry/Atlanta and
- Andrew Purvis/New York.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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