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- Science - Health
- How Aids Has Affected Our Society
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- Today more Americans are infected with STD's than at any other time in
- history. The most serious of these diseases is AIDS. Since the first
- cases were identified in the United States in 1981, AIDS has touched the
- lives of millions of American families. This deadly disease is unlike
- any other in modern history. Changes in social behavior can be directly
- linked to AIDS. Its overall effect on society has been dramatic.
- It is unknown whether AIDS and HIV existed and killed in the U.S. and
- North America before the early 1970s. However in the early 1980s,
- "deaths by opportunistic infections, previously observed mainly in
- tissue-transplant recipients receiving immunosuppressive therapy", were
- recognized in otherwise healthy homosexual men. In 1983 French
- oncologist Luc Montagnier and scientists at the Pasteur Institute in
- Paris isolated what appeared to be a new human retrovirus from the lymph
- node of a man at risk for having AIDS. At the same time, scientists
- working in the laboratory of American research, scientist Robert Gallo
- at the National Cancer Institute, one of the National Institutes of
- Health in Bethesda, Maryland, and a group headed by American virologist
- Jay Levy at the University of California at San Francisco isolated a
- retrovirus from people with AIDS and from individuals having contact
- with people with AIDS. All three groups of scientists had isolated what
- is now known as HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
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- In 1995 HIV was estimated to infect almost 20 million people worldwide,
- and several million of those people had developed AIDS. The disease is
- obviously an important social issue.
- AIDS has caused many to rethink their own social behavior. People are
- forced to use caution when involving themselves in sexual activity.
- They must use contraception to avoid the dangers of infection. Many
- people consider HIV infection and AIDS to be completely preventable
- because the routes of HIV transmission are so well known. To completely
- prevent transmission, however, dramatic changes in sexual behavior and
- drug dependence would have to occur throughout the world. Prevention
- efforts that promote sexual awareness through open discussion and condom
- distribution in public schools have been opposed due to fear that these
- efforts encourage sexual promiscuity among young adults. Similarly,
- needle-exchange programs have been criticized as promoting drug abuse.
- Governor Christine Todd Whitman vetoed a bill in New Jersey that tried
- to create a needle-exchange program. She was accused of being
- "compassionless". She replied that she could not allow drug addicts to
- continue to break the law. By distributing needles, she felt that she
- was, in fact, encouraging them to break the law.
- Prevention programs that identify HIV-infected individuals and notify
- their sexual partners, as well as programs that promote HIV testing at
- the time of marriage or pregnancy, have been criticized for invading
- personal privacy.
- Efforts aimed at public awareness have been propelled by
- community-based organizations, such as Project Inform and Act-Up, that
- provide current information to HIV-infected individuals and to
- individuals at risk for infection. Public figures and celebrities who
- are themselves
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- HIV-infected or have died from AIDS-including American basketball player
- Magic Johnson, American actor Rock Hudson, American diver Greg Louganis,
- American tennis player Arthur Ashe, and British musician Freddie
- Mercury-have personalized the disease of AIDS and have thereby helped
- society come to terms with the enormity of the epidemic. In memory of
- those people who died from AIDS, especially in the early years of the
- epidemic, a giant quilt project was initiated in which each panel of the
- quilt was dedicated to the memory of an individual AIDS death. This
- quilt has traveled on display from community to community to promote
- AIDS awareness.
- The U.S. government has also attempted to assist HIV-infected
- individuals through legislation and additional community-funding
- measures. In 1990 HIV-infected people were included in the Americans
- with Disabilities Act, making discrimination against these individuals
- for jobs, housing, and other social benefits illegal. Additionally, a
- community-funding program designed to assist in the daily lives of
- people living with AIDS was established. This congressional act, the
- Ryan White Comprehensive AIDS Resources Emergency Act, was named in
- memory of a young man who contracted HIV through blood products and
- became a public figure for his courage in fighting the disease and
- community prejudice. The act is still in place, although continued
- funding for such social programs is under debate by current legislators.
- The lack of effective vaccines and antiviral drugs has spurred
- speculation that the funding for AIDS research is insufficient. Although
- the actual amount of government funding for AIDS research is large, most
- of these funds are used for expensive clinical studies to evaluate new
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- drugs. Many scientists believe that not enough is known about the basic
- biology of HIV, and they recommend shifting the emphasis of AIDS
- research to basic research that could ultimately result in more
- effective medicines.
- Most people agree that AIDS is a very important issue and cannot be
- ignored. Personally, I believe that the country and society is to blame
- for the spread of AIDS. We let it get out of control. The modes of
- transmission have been known for a considerable amount of time, yet the
- disease still continues to spread. There are few people who can
- honostly claim not to know the ways in which AIDS is transmitted.
- Similarly, there are very few people who don't know the ways to prevent
- the spread of AIDS. These methods are very simple and easy to follow.
- Yet, thousands will be infected this year alone.
- Another aspect of AIDS that up until very recently was a serious
- problem is the treatment, or mistreatment, of those who are HIV
- positive, but do not have AIDS. One of the most famous stories is the
- treatment of Ryan White. He was not allowed to attend a public school
- because he had AIDS. His story was told and people began to realize
- that those with HIV can lead "normal" lives and must be treated equally.
- Fortunately, conditions have improved.
- It is hard to know what society might be like had it not been for
- AIDS. It might be fair to assume that society in general would be much
- more sexually promiscuous had AIDS not curbed this trend. Another
- effect that isn't usually noticed at first glance is the creation of
- jobs. AIDS has made it necessary for thousands of workers in the
- pharmaceuticals industry as well as research. Also, people have been
- hired to counsel AIDS patients and write literature about the causes and
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- the methods of prevention. Even the arts have changed since AIDS came
- about. Songs have been written. Movies have been made, such as 'The
- Band Played On'.
- In conclusion, the effects of AIDS on society are very far-reaching.
- They stretch from social behavior changes to a change in art and music.
- AIDS has caused all Americans to think about their lives and how fragile
- life is. They must be careful and use caution. Hopefully, all of
- society will one day know the causes of AIDS and the means of
- prevention. They will take knowledge and apply it. With a cure and an
- end to the spread of this disease, society will survive and prosper.
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- Bibliography
-
- Martelli, Leonard J. and others. When Someone You Know Has AIDS.
- Crown, 1987.
- Shilts, Randy. And the Band Played On. St. Martin's, 1987. ôPolitics,
- People and the AIDS Epidemicö.
- Weitz, Rose. Life with AIDS. Rutgers, 1991.
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