Special Report on HIV and AIDSJune 2000 A spate of articles appearing recently in the general media have tackled the issue of HIV's causal role in AIDS from a number of directions. Despite the fact that this issue was resolved years ago in the scientific arena, a few so-called HIV/AIDS denialists (including journalists such as Celia Farber, who has written about AIDS for the magazines Spin and Gear, and groups such as ACT UP San Francisco) continue to charge that AIDS-related illnesses are the exclusive result of such factors as malnutrition, poverty, and illicit drug use (i.e., not HIV). In their view, people with HIV positive antibody tests die because they take antiretroviral drugs. As a result, some unsuspecting people are being misinformed with significant and potentially tragic real-life results. Whether negotiating safer sex or dealing with an HIV positive diagnosis, a person's level of knowledge and experience, in addition to resources and aptitudes, both financial and emotional, affect how he or she will cope. Misinformation adds a level of confusion that is an annoyance at best and deadly at worst. On a much broader level, the government of South Africa, for one, is actively "evaluating" the cumulative data, ostensibly to officially determine if among other things HIV truly causes AIDS, while enacting dubious public health policies. In the past weeks, news reports have been emerging almost daily on the foment in South Africa, where nearly 13% of the adult population is HIV positive and where now, for instance, the government at least for the time being is withholding the provision of AZT (Retrovir) to pregnant women and to the armed forces. -- Leslie Hanna Related BETA Articles: "HIV is the Only Cause of AIDS: The Potential for Journalism to Impact the Public Health"; "HIV Causes AIDS: Proof Derived from Koch's Postulates
This article was provided by San Francisco AIDS Foundation. It is a part of the publication Bulletin of Experimental Treatments for AIDS. Visit San Francisco AIDS Foundation's Web site to find out more about their activities, publications and services.
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