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- <title>
- June 25, 1990: AIDS:Getting More Than Its Share?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- June 25, 1990 Who Gives A Hoot?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 80
- AIDS: Getting More Than Its Share?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Charles Krauthammer
- </p>
- <p> Last month a thousand demonstrators camped outside the
- National Institutes of Health near Washington and with a
- talented display of street theater protested governmental and
- scientific neglect of AIDS. If not the angriest demonstration
- Washington has seen in a long time, it was certainly the most
- misdirected. The idea that American government or American
- society has been inattentive or unresponsive to AIDS is quite
- simply absurd. Consider:
- </p>
- <p> Treatment. Congress is about to do something extremely rare:
- allocate money specifically for the treatment of one disease.
- The Senate voted $2.9 billion, the House $4 billion over five
- years for treating AIDS. And only AIDS. When Senator Malcolm
- Wallop introduced an amendment allowing rural districts with
- few AIDS patients to spend the money on other diseases, the
- amendment was voted down, 2 to 1.
- </p>
- <p> Research. Except for cancer, AIDS now receives more
- Government research money than any other illness in America.
- AIDS gets $1.2 billion to $1.3 billion. Heart disease, for
- example, receives about half as much, $700 billion. The AIDS
- research allocation is not just huge, it is hugely
- disproportionate. AIDS has killed 83,000 Americans in nine
- years. Heart disease kills that many every six weeks.
- </p>
- <p> Testing. Under pressure from AIDS activists, the FDA has
- radically changed its regulations for testing new drugs. The
- Administration has proposed "parallel track" legislation that
- would make drugs available to certain patients before the usual
- testing process is complete. Nothing wrong with this. But this
- exception is for AIDS patients only--a fact that hardly
- supports the thesis that government is holding back an AIDS
- cure or discriminating against AIDS patients.
- </p>
- <p> The suffering caused by AIDS is enormous. Sufferers deserve
- compassion, and their disease deserves scientific inquiry. But
- AIDS has got far more. AIDS has become the most privileged
- disease in America. Why? Mainly because its victims are young,
- in many cases creative and famous. Their deaths are therefore
- particularly poignant and public. And because one of the two
- groups that AIDS disproportionately affects (gay men) is highly
- organized. This combination of conspicuousness and constituency
- has allowed AIDS activists to get more research funding, more
- treatment money and looser drug-testing restrictions than any
- comparable disease.
- </p>
- <p> Nothing wrong with that. The system for allocating research
- and treatment money in American medicine is archaic, chaotic
- and almost random anyway. Under the "Disease of the Month Club"
- syndrome, any disease that has in some way affected a
- Congressman or some relation gets special treatment. There is
- rough justice in this method of allocation because after a
- while Congressmen and their kin get to experience most of the
- medical tragedies that life has to offer. At the end of the
- day, therefore, funds tend to get allocated in a fairly
- proportionate way.
- </p>
- <p> AIDS is now riding a crest of public support, won in the
- rough and tumble of politics. All perfectly legitimate, and a
- tribute to the passion and commitment of AIDS activists. But
- that passion turns to mere stridency when they take to the
- streets to protest that a homophobic society has been
- ungenerous and stinting in its response to the tragedy of AIDS.
- In fact, American society is giving overwhelming and indeed
- disproportionate attention and resources to the fight.
- </p>
- <p> At first the homosexual community was disoriented and
- defensive in reaction to AIDS. In the quite understandable
- attempt to get public support, it fixed on a strategy of
- claiming that AIDS was everyone's problem. Since we were all
- potential sufferers--anyone can get AIDS, went the slogan--society as an act of self-protection should go all out for cure
- and care.
- </p>
- <p> This campaign was initially successful. But then it ran into
- an obstacle. It wasn't true. AIDS is not everyone's problem.
- It is extremely difficult to get AIDS. It requires the carrying
- out of specific and quite intentional acts. Nine out of ten
- people with AIDS have got it through homosexual sex and/or
- intravenous drug use. The NIH demonstrators, therefore, now
- appeal less to solidarity than to guilt: every person who dies
- is more blood on the hands of a society unwilling to give
- every dollar demanded for a cure.
- </p>
- <p> But society has blood on its hands every time it refuses to
- give every dollar demanded by the cancer lobby, the heart
- disease lobby, the diabetes lobby. So now a different tack: the
- claim that the AIDS epidemic is, of course, not an act of
- government but an act of God--and government has not done
- enough to help its helpless victims.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, AIDS is far less an act of God than is, say, cancer
- or diabetes. Apart from a small number of relentlessly
- exploited Ryan White-like exceptions, the overwhelming majority
- of sufferers get AIDS through some voluntary action: sex or
- drug abuse. You don't get AIDS the way you used to get TB, by
- having someone on the trolley cough in your face. You don't get
- it the way you get, say, brain cancer, which is through some
- act of God that we don't understand at all.
- </p>
- <p> AIDS is in the class of diseases whose origins we understand
- quite well. It is behaviorally induced and behaviorally
- preventable. In that sense it is in the same moral class as
- lung cancer, the majority of whose victims get it through
- voluntary behavior well known to be highly dangerous. For lung
- cancer the behavior is smoking; for AIDS, unsafe sex (not, it
- might be noted, homosexuality) and IV drug use.
- </p>
- <p> As a society we do not refuse either to treat or research
- lung cancer simply because its sufferers brought it on
- themselves. But we would find it somewhat perverse and
- distasteful if lung cancer sufferers began demonstrating
- wildly, blaming society and government for their problems, and
- demanding that they be first in line for a cure.
- </p>
- <p> Many people contracted AIDS before its causes became known,
- about six years ago. For them it is truly an act of God. For
- the rest (as the word has gone out, an ever increasing
- percentage), it is an act of man. They, of course, deserve our
- care and treatment. But it is hard to see from where they
- derive the claim to be first in line--ahead of those dying
- of leukemia and breast cancer and stroke--for the resources
- and compassion of a nation.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-