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- <text id=90TT1731>
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- <title>
- July 02, 1990: A Losing Battle With AIDS
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 02, 1990 Nelson Mandela:A Hero In America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MEDICINE, Page 42
- A Losing Battle With AIDS
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In the streets of San Francisco, victims cry for attention and
- help
- </p>
- <p>By Dick Thompson--With reporting by Lee Griggs/San Francisco
- </p>
- <p> As more than 10,000 participants from at least 80 countries
- gathered last week for the Sixth International Conference on
- AIDS, the spotlight was focused squarely on the victims of the
- disease. The meeting was staged in San Francisco, the epicenter
- of the epidemic, and held during the city's Gay Pride Week, an
- annual festival that drew 100,000 homosexual men and women from
- around the U.S. AIDS sufferers helped write the conference
- agenda and delivered impassioned speeches about the
- extraordinary human cost of the disease. In fact, they stole
- the show from the hundreds of scientists, who exchanged
- information but had no breakthroughs to announce.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the time, more was going on outside the Moscone
- Convention Center than inside. The streets were often filled
- with protesting gay activists, who demanded more Government
- money to help find a cure for AIDS and provide care for those
- afflicted. Said Paul Boneberg, head of a group called National
- Mobilization Against AIDS: "We have to take this opportunity
- to draw the world's attention to discrimination and underfunded
- research and medical care that characterize the AIDS problem.
- People are dying, and these protests move policy forward."
- </p>
- <p> At times, though, the demonstrations generated more
- annoyance than sympathy. On Wednesday a large group of
- protesters outside the convention hall confronted a line of
- police officers in full riot gear. In the resulting scuffle,
- 80 demonstrators were handcuffed, loaded into buses and taken
- to headquarters to be booked on misdemeanor charges. (They were
- all later released.) After the arrests, some of the remaining
- protesters staged a march down Market Street, one of San
- Francisco's main thoroughfares. The marchers stalled trolley
- buses in the middle of the street by pulling the vehicles'
- rooftop poles away from the overhead wires that supply the
- vehicles with electric power. Another group briefly occupied
- a cable car, jostling passengers and posting in the window a
- placard bearing the slogan SILENCE=DEATH. By week's end police
- had arrested and released more than 400 demonstrators.
- </p>
- <p> No one can deny that AIDS victims deserve all the compassion
- and help that society can muster. The latest statistics
- presented at the conference show that the toll is still
- mounting and the end of the epidemic is nowhere in sight. At
- least 600,000 Americans are infected with the virus, more than
- 136,000 have become sick, and some 83,000 of those have died.
- </p>
- <p> But many public health experts fear the focus on present
- suffering may be diverting too much attention from the task of
- protecting those who could become victims. Billions of dollars
- have been poured into research aimed at finding a cure, but
- relatively little has gone into programs designed to stop the
- disease from spreading. The National Research Council, in a
- report released last week called AIDS: The Second Decade,
- declared that prevention efforts fall "far short of the
- magnitude of intervention needed."
- </p>
- <p> That is a tragedy, since AIDS, which is caused by the human
- immunodeficiency virus (HIV), is a preventable disease. No one
- gets it from the air, food or water. The victims mostly fall
- into two categories: people who have had sex with infected
- individuals without using condoms, and drug addicts who picked
- up the virus from contaminated needles. Wide use of condoms and
- distribution of sterile needles to addicts could stall the
- epidemic. But efforts to encourage such measures have been
- hampered by conservative politicians, who are squeamish about
- sex education and clean-needle programs. As many conferees
- pointed out last week, the failure to mount an effective
- prevention campaign is allowing the disease to spread more
- readily from adult males to women and adolescents, who were
- once thought to be relatively safe. "Do we want to stop this
- damn epidemic?" asks Dr. June Osborn, chairwoman of the
- National AIDS Commission. "If we do, we have to teach people
- how to protect themselves from risk."
- </p>
- <p> Prevention is vital because a cure is still distant, if it
- is attainable at all. Although several drugs are being tested
- on patients, only one, AZT, has been approved by the Food and
- Drug Administration for general use. AZT helps slow the
- progress of the disease in many sufferers and prolongs lives,
- but it does not eradicate the virus, and it has toxic side
- effects. Treating AIDS is like trying to hit many targets at
- once, since the virus destroys the body's immune system and
- leaves the victim open to a multitude of afflictions. Doctors
- have learned to combat some of these infections, but as
- patients live longer, new ailments are popping up.
- </p>
- <p> The main obstacle to attacking AIDS is that HIV is a
- so-called retrovirus--one that inserts its genes into the
- genetic material of the host cells, in this case the cells of
- the immune system. A drug cannot eliminate the virus without
- also wiping out those vital cells. "I don't think one can think
- of a cure for a retrovirus," says Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of
- the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
- </p>
- <p> It is possible, however, to hope for a vaccine, and the
- modest amount of progress toward that goal was reviewed at the
- conference. In recent experiments, scientists have successfully
- used vaccines to protect chimps against infection by a strain
- of HIV and monkeys against a similar virus. Seven potential
- vaccines are being tested on humans. The problem is that HIV
- mutates rapidly and comes in many varieties. It will be
- difficult to produce a shot that offers protection against
- every possible strain of the virus. At best, an effective
- vaccine is many years away.
- </p>
- <p> In the meantime, the only antidote to AIDS is to stop the
- practices that spread the disease. And that is becoming
- increasingly difficult as the nature of the epidemic changes.
- In general, homosexual men are getting the prevention message,
- and new infections have slowed drastically in gay communities.
- Most gays who come down with the disease now were infected
- years ago, when less was known about AIDS. But the infection
- continues to spread unchecked among drug addicts. In 1989, 23%
- of the new AIDS cases occurred in people who inject drugs
- intravenously, up from 11% in 1981.
- </p>
- <p> From the drug culture, AIDS is starting to seep into the
- heterosexual population. More and more women are getting AIDS,
- mostly because they either inject drugs themselves or have sex
- with infected men. But the problem is not limited to the
- households of heroin addicts. AIDS is increasingly common among
- abusers of drugs that are not injected, such as crack cocaine
- and alcohol. These people tend to be sexually uninhibited and
- promiscuous, which increases their risk of picking up the AIDS
- virus. Last year about 5% of the new AIDS cases resulted from
- heterosexual contact, compared with 0.5% in 1981.
- </p>
- <p> Many experts believe providing sterile needles to addicts
- would be one of the most effective ways of slowing the AIDS
- epidemic. That kind of program has shown promise in other
- countries, but in the U.S. such efforts are limited to a few
- locally funded experiments. The Bush Administration refuses to
- support any clean-needle program or even research into whether
- that approach is effective. Only an educational campaign to
- encourage addicts to sterilize needles with bleach has federal
- funding. And that $50 million program, a minuscule part of the
- $2.6 billion annual federal AIDS budget, was nearly cut this
- year at the behest of conservative Senator Jesse Helms of North
- Carolina.
- </p>
- <p> Helms and other like-minded politicians are also hostile to
- efforts to educate people, particularly young people, about
- safe-sex practices. Most teens are not likely to be exposed to
- the AIDS virus, but those who become sexually active at an
- early age, particularly in poor communities where drug use is
- rampant, are at risk. A Government study found that about 1%
- of the black teenage girls who bore children in New York City
- during 1988 were infected with the AIDS virus. There is a 40%
- to 60% chance that an infected woman will transmit the virus to
- her child.
- </p>
- <p> It is clear that educational efforts should be generously
- funded and sustained indefinitely. Each new group of
- adolescents must be alerted afresh to the dangers of AIDS and
- the ways to block the disease. This is especially critical for
- young gay men. While the large majority of older homosexuals
- have learned to practice safe sex, the younger generation does
- not appear to be so scrupulous. One study in San Francisco of
- 100 gay men, ages 18 to 25, found that within the previous
- month 46% had engaged at least once in anal intercourse without
- a condom.
- </p>
- <p> Although this was a small study, and it may not be
- indicative of behavior in all gay communities, the findings
- were shocking. They show how far educational efforts still have
- to go. If society is unwilling to expend the energy and
- resources necessary to teach its young people to avoid AIDS,
- then the epidemic could grow ever larger and ever more tragic
- well into the next century.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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