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- <text id=91TT2656>
- <title>
- Nov. 25, 1991: How Safe Is Sex?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 25, 1991 10 Ways to Cure The Health Care Mess
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 72
- How Safe Is Sex?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>When Magic Johnson announced that he had the AIDS virus, he put
- the risk of heterosexual transmission squarely in center court
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt--Reported by Elaine Lafferty/Los Angeles,
- Andrew Purvis/New York and Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> As long as the epidemic didn't touch anyone close to
- them, many Americans found it easy to put AIDS out of mind. For
- all the suffering and pain and lives cut short, it just seemed
- like someone else's problem. AIDS was something that happened
- to ghetto dwellers, drug addicts or gays, not to middle- and
- upper-class folks who limited themselves to straight sex.
- </p>
- <p> Now it's harder to ignore AIDS. When Magic Johnson stepped
- forward to announce that he had tested HIV positive, his plight
- suddenly seemed like everybody's nightmare. Johnson's claim that
- he picked up the AIDS virus heterosexually, rather than through
- intravenous-drug use or homosexual contact, dramatically raised
- some of the most crucial health questions of the 1990s: How easy
- is it to get AIDS from straight sex? How fast can it spread?
- Could an AIDS epidemic like the ones sweeping through Third
- World nations take root in the general U.S. population as well?
- </p>
- <p> According to the latest figures from the Centers for
- Disease Control, the risk to most American heterosexuals is
- still small, but it is real and growing. About 11,000 reported
- AIDS cases--or less than 6% of the 200,000 Americans afflicted
- over the past decade--have arisen from heterosexual contact.
- But while the number of heterosexual cases is relatively tiny,
- it jumped 40% last year, faster than any other category. As many
- as 1 million Americans may be infected with the virus that
- causes AIDS but not yet suffering from the disease. And no one
- knows how many of those people were exposed heterosexually.
- </p>
- <p> The epidemic has hit the U.S. in three waves. The first
- occurred among homosexual men and is now leveling off. The
- second swept through pockets of IV-drug users, especially in
- certain East Coast cities, and has yet to reach its peak. The
- third wave is just taking off among heterosexual men and women
- who have had sexual contact with one or more of the high-risk
- groups. The question now is how far--and how fast--it will
- travel into the rest of the population.
- </p>
- <p> One cause for concern is that heterosexual transmission is
- the rule, not the exception, in most countries affected by the
- disease. Figures released by the World Health Organization last
- week show that 75% of the people who have the AIDS virus
- worldwide were infected heterosexually. In Africa, where
- one-tenth of the world's population accounts for half the
- estimated 10 million AIDS infections around the globe,
- heterosexual transmission is responsible for more than 8 out of
- 10 cases. In Southern and Southeast Asia, where the epidemic is
- growing more rapidly than anywhere else, heterosexual contact
- is also the dominant mode of transmission. Among the prostitutes
- in Bombay's red-light district, 25% to 30% are HIV positive. In
- the poorer sections of Nairobi, Kenya, infection rates among
- prostitutes run higher than 90%.
- </p>
- <p> Most experts attribute the prevalence of heterosexual AIDS
- transmission in Africa to widespread venereal diseases such as
- syphilis and chancroid. These diseases cause sores and
- infections that make it easier for the virus to pass from one
- person to another--a problem exacerbated by a medical system
- that is shockingly inadequate. Gonorrhea rates in Africa are as
- much as 20 times those of the industrialized West, and yet there
- are one-sixtieth as many doctors per capita as there are in the
- U.S. A case that would be treated promptly in a young American
- is likely to become chronic in his African counterpart. "After
- a couple of weeks, the person gets used to it and resumes having
- sex," says Dr. Myron Essex, chairman of the Harvard AIDS
- Institute. In crowded African urban centers, the virus has
- become ubiquitous, threatening to kill off almost an entire
- generation of young adults.
- </p>
- <p> Few experts believe anything like that is going to happen
- in the U.S. Most Americans do not have the venereal diseases
- that make it so much easier for the virus to be transmitted
- through heterosexual intercourse. The general level of hygiene,
- the relative isolation of the pockets of infection from the
- rest of the population and the widespread availability of
- treatment for sexually transmitted diseases, even among the
- poor, make it unlikely that an African-style epidemic could
- sweep across America.
- </p>
- <p> But the U.S. does have trouble spots: the largely
- African-American and Hispanic ghettos in the East. Widespread
- needle sharing among drug addicts allowed the AIDS virus to get
- a solid foothold in major U.S. cities in the 1980s, and now
- practices such as trading sex for drugs threaten to broaden the
- problem. AIDS is already epidemic in the poorest neighborhoods
- of New York City, Newark, Baltimore, Washington and Miami,
- places where social problems and the lack of good medical care
- mimic Third World conditions. "The fact that we see sexually
- transmitted diseases rising in our inner cities is an ominous
- sign," says Helene Gayle, an international AIDS expert at the
- Centers for Disease Control.
- </p>
- <p> There are already indications that AIDS fostered in the
- inner cities may be beginning to creep into outlying areas. In
- parts of Georgia and Texas, mini-epidemics are appearing. "The
- fastest growth is in rural areas and small cities," says Sten
- Vermund, chief of AIDS epidemiology at the National Institutes
- of Health. Investigators suspect that drug users who contracted
- AIDS in the city have started to move back to their hometowns,
- either to be cared for by family members or to try to straighten
- out their lives. Once there, they may start a chain reaction of
- local AIDS infections.
- </p>
- <p> But while health officials caution against complacency,
- they emphasize that there is no need for most people to panic.
- The fact is that unless a person has a chronic venereal disease--or engages in a high-risk activity such as needle swapping or
- anal sex--the AIDS virus is not that easy to get. Medical
- literature is filled with cases in which husbands and wives had
- sex hundreds of times over several years without passing the
- virus from one to the other.
- </p>
- <p> It is especially difficult for the virus to move from an
- infected woman to an uninfected man, as a study published last
- September in the Journal of the American Medical Association
- makes clear. A team of scientists, led by Nancy Padian of the
- University of California at San Francisco, studied AIDS-virus
- transmission among 379 heterosexual couples. While the
- scientists found 61 cases in which an HIV-infected man gave the
- virus to a woman, they saw only one case of an infected woman's
- giving it to a man. And in that case, the couple engaged in some
- particularly unsafe practices, including unprotected anal sex
- and swapping sex partners with members of a "swinging" club.
- </p>
- <p> The initial skepticism that greeted Magic Johnson's
- explanation of how he had contracted the AIDS virus stemmed from
- such studies--and from his reluctance to speak directly to the
- rumors of bisexual activities in the past. Johnson finally
- addressed those rumors last week. "I have never had a homosexual
- encounter," he wrote in SPORTS ILLUSTRATED. "Never."
- </p>
- <p> Such denials are sometimes questioned by medical
- professionals. Doctors and nurses who minister to AIDS patients
- say that a heterosexual man who has contracted HIV will often
- tell his wife and children he got it from a prostitute. But
- close to death, these same men will sometimes confide that they
- did have a homosexual experience. Or that they flirted, many
- years ago, with intravenous drugs. At Sherman Oaks Hospital in
- California, which has been caring for AIDS patients since 1980,
- the nurses are no longer surprised. "When a guy says he got it
- from a woman, we just nod," says a nurse. "It's probably not
- true, but that's the way most of them want to handle it. And
- that's fine."
- </p>
- <p> In the end, it doesn't matter whether Magic Johnson got
- the AIDS virus through heterosexual or homosexual sex. The fact
- remains that people can get infected through heterosexual
- contact and that a few simple precautions can sharply reduce--or eliminate--those risks. If Johnson can get that message
- across to those who need it most--sexually active teens and
- young adults--then his outspokenness will have done an
- immeasurable public service.
- </p>
- <p> There were signs last week that Johnson has already
- started to make a difference. In schools across the country,
- teachers hastily organized classes and assemblies to answer the
- flood of student questions. At Inglewood High School near Los
- Angeles, where the Lakers frequently practice and Magic's name
- is magical, Jesse Jackson spoke to the students about AIDS, and
- the school passed out free condoms. "I hope everyone got one,"
- says Rashieda Lane, 16. "I don't want my friends to catch it."
- </p>
- <p> Americans are likely to hear a lot more about condoms in
- the coming months. Fox Broadcasting, the fourth largest TV
- network, reversed a long-standing policy and became the first
- national broadcaster willing to accept paid condom advertising--provided the ads stress the health benefits and not birth
- control. CBS is also reviewing its condom-ad policies.
- </p>
- <p> Government policymakers could be coming around as well. In
- New York City, where a program that provided drug addicts with
- clean needles had been canceled, Mayor David Dinkins announced
- that he had changed his mind and endorsed a new needle-exchange
- scheme. Even President Bush, who has done little of substance
- to support prevention campaigns, made the symbolic gesture of
- inviting Magic Johnson to fill a vacancy on his National
- Commission on AIDS. Johnson quickly accepted.
- </p>
- <p> Efforts are also being accelerated on the research front.
- The World Health Organization, which had held up field trials
- of several experimental AIDS vaccines pending tests on animals,
- announced last week that it would skip the time-consuming lab
- trials and test the vaccines on humans in Brazil, Rwanda,
- Thailand and Uganda, perhaps within two years. In the U.S. the
- Centers for Disease Control is considering doing the same thing
- in the country's AIDS hot spots.
- </p>
- <p> Until there is a vaccine or a cure, responsibility for
- AIDS in America will have to remain where it is now: with the
- people in danger of getting and spreading it. For the individual
- considering a casual sexual encounter, wearing a condom--or
- abstaining altogether--can mean the difference between
- acquiring a deadly virus and avoiding one. For the country as
- a whole, it can spell the difference between a contained health
- problem and one that is out of control.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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