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  • Print publication year: 2002
  • Online publication date: August 2009

7 - ACTing UP: AIDS cures and lay expertise

Summary

On 24 April 1984, Margaret Heckler, US Secretary of Health and Human Services, announced with great gusto at a Washington press conference that the cause of AIDS had been found. A special sort of virus – a retrovirus – later labelled as HIV, was the culprit. Vaccinations would be available within two years. Modern medical science had triumphed.

Next summer, movie star Rock Hudson died of AIDS. The gay community had lived and died with the disease for the previous four years. Now that the cause of AIDS had been found and scientists were starting to talk about cures, the afflicted became increasingly anxious as to when such cures would become available. Added urgency arose from the very course of the disease. The HIV blood test meant lots of seemingly healthy people were facing an uncertain future. Was it more beneficial to start long-term therapy immediately or wait until symptoms appeared? Given the rapid advance in medical knowledge about AIDS and the remaining uncertainties (even the cause of AIDS was a matter of scientific debate), was it better to act now with crude therapies or wait for the more refined treatments promised later?

AIDS: THE ‘GAY PLAGUE’

AIDS is not confined to homosexuals, but in the US it was first described in the media as the ‘gay plague’ and gays as a community were quick to respond to its consequences. The gay community in the US is no ordinary group.

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The Golem at Large
  • Online ISBN: 9780511541353
  • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511541353
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