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Chapter One :
AIDS Is Your Problem Too
Ambulance
men in "space-suits' - Bored
rigid with AIDS - Chain reaction
- Spreading like wildfire
- Injecting death - Could
the whole world die? - Who is 'safe'?
- Heads in the sand - 'It
could never happen here' - Worse
than a war - Nothing new
about AIDS? - The great
sex age is over
Extract from Aids and You - book by Dr Patrick Dixon,
published by Kingsway 1989, 1990, 2002
Introduction:Christians
are Leading the Fight Against AIDS - Chapter
1:AIDS is Your Problem Too - Chapter
2:Vaccines, Treatments and Condoms - Chapter
3:Agony AIDS - Questions People Ask Chapter
4:Nowhere to Go - Chapter
5:What Do You Think? - Chapter
6:Where Are You Going? - Finally:Time
for Action - ACET
International Alliance
Also read The
Truth about AIDS - free online book with much more AIDS information:
- Latest
AIDS statistics, AIDS information - Africa AIDS Crisis - History
of AIDS - AIDS epidemic, India, Asia, Eastern Europe, Central
Europe, Russia, America, China
- AIDS
research - causes of AIDS - AIDS treatment - retroviruses - protease
inhibitors - cure? Antiretroviral therapy for HIV
- HIV
transmission, AIDS risk factors and HIV window period
- What
is AIDS? - HIV symptoms - AIDS symtoms - symptoms early HIV infection
- early signs infection
- How
reliable are condoms? HIV dating - reducing HIV transmission
- Life
and death issues - HIV medicine
- AIDS
FAQ - vaccine, treatment, AIDS testing, Africa, China, Children,
workplace discrimination, AIDS myths, origin of AIDS
- Moral
dilemmas - euthanasia and AIDS treatments
- AIDS
and the church - when church members need help
- Community
care - treatment, adults, children, orphans
- AIDS
education - AIDS awareness in youth and schools
- HIV
Prevention - needle exchange program and condom distribution
- AIDS
in Africa and HIV in Africa, HIV infected surgeons
- Ten
point AIDS management plan for governments
- A global Christian challenge - church response to AIDS
- Guidelines
for best practice in running HIV / AIDS programmes in developing
countries, plus many helpful case studies and stories (Africa
/ India / Asia)
- A Christian
response to AIDS - global AIDS challenge to the church (article
for Tear Fund)
Within a few years every person in the world will
probably know personally someone who has died because of AIDS.
More than one in 200 of all adults walking on the earth are
infected already. It may be an older brother or sister, a cousin,
an uncle, a friend, a man in the same street, a shopkeeper, or someone
at school or at work. You may not realise it because AIDS is kept
so secret. You may think the person died of cancer, but someone
somewhere knows otherwise.
It's already the case in most of Africa and parts
of South East Asia.
By 2002 over 80 million people had probably been infected
with HIV - no one knows accurate figures.
And HIV is spreading twice as fast across the world today
as five years ago.
Some people freak out. They turn the TV channels over
whenever AIDS is mentioned. They get scared, if they think someone
at the party last night had the disease. They panic about the thought
of touching someone with AIDS or picking up a dirty glass without
realising and drinking from it. If they actually think several people
may have been infected, then panic turns to hysteria.
Ambulance
men in "space-suits' (Return
to Index)
In the early days of the epidemic people acted in
strange ways.
In the UK, police turned up wearing gloves, masks and overshoes
to arrest a suspect, in case he was infected. Ambulance men turned
up to transport someone who could have AIDS wearing 'space-suits'.
A priest offered someone Holy Communion wearing gloves, with a bit
of bread stuck on the edge of a wooden spatula. Old ladies in churches
went back to their seats without drinking the wine. Meals-on-wheels
delivery service of a hot meal to the home of someone who was ill
became a stone cold meal left on the doorstep because the driver
was too scared to ring the bell and go inside.
In Calcutta, India, a brand new AIDS ward was padlocked
shut because no doctors or nurses could be found to work in it.
In the same city a mother and newborn baby were thrown onto
the streets when the medics found the mother had HIV infection.
In Uganda fellow villagers have turned their backs in the
past on people with AIDS dying without food or water, in case they
died entering the homes of the sick and dying.
Whatever the culture, whatever the nation, you will
find examples of stigma, rejection, hostility and abuse to those
with AIDS.
Thankfully attitudes are changing in many places but the
burden is still there.
As a doctor I know of no other illness in living memory that
has caused such widespread reactions.
Why?
Fear soon turns to anger. Bricks fly through windows
or the home is burnt to the ground (this has happened twice in London).
People are sacked on the spot and thrown out of their homes. And
the problem keeps on growing.
Bored
rigid with AIDS (Return
to Index)
Most people I meet in Western countries are bored
rigid with AIDS until they meet someone who has it. It is a terrible
shock to find your best friend is dying. It is even worse when you
find that no one will talk about it because he has the wrong disease.
He doesn't have cancer, and it is as if he has ceased to exist.
No one wants to know.
But in countries like Rwanda, Burundi, Zimbabwe, South
Africa or Uganda it's very different:
every family has experienced AIDS grief and death is ever
present - just look at the coffin makers by the side of the road
or the steady trail of mourners at cemeteries in South Africa, where
space is running out for burials in many cities because of AIDS.
But where AIDS is so overwhelming there's another problem:
people turn off, slipping into denial.
AIDS is the silent killer because by the time. you
know you've got it it's too late. But the trouble is that HIV is
spreading fast with 15,000 new infections every day, and in spite
of what many Westerners have been told, most of the people infected
worldwide are neither gay men nor drug addicts.
And despite what many in the poorest nations have
been told, many people dying with HIV have been celibate before marriage and faithful since - infected by partners or medical treatments
with infected blood or dirty needles.
Many people in countries like India aren't worried
about AIDS because no one they know is dying - yet. But the problem
is that by the time you know one friend who is ill, you will probably
know a hundred people who are infected and going to die in the future.
There is a big time delay.
Chain
reaction (Return to Index)
People you see on the TV, or read about in the papers,
may have been infected in the early 1990s. For the last five to
ten years they have felt completely well, perhaps totally unaware
of the situation and may have passed on the infection.
One year, only two people in a community are infected,
but within twelve months the number has risen to four. By the time
another year is up the number has risen to eight and a year later
it reaches sixteen. Everyone is well and looking fit. No one has
even the remotest idea that anything is wrong. After another year-and-a-half
forty are doomed, and a year later almost 100.
This kind of pattern of spread has been common in Africa
and other parts of the world.
And then one of the people infected early on has a
mysterious viral illness and is out of action for six weeks. When
he returns he looks really tired, but within a week or two he is
back in action again. Six months later his friends notice that he
has lost some weight, and one night after dinner he is rushed off
to the hospital because he can't breathe.
One of his mates turns up to see him the next day
to find he has died of pneumonia. A week later his brother tells
someone in the bar that the doctors suspect he died of AIDS. That
same night the 102nd person in the club took a risk with someone
he thought he knew was 'safe' and became infected. So if you know
that ten people in your city or town have died of AIDS, you know
that maybe between 250 and 1,000 are walking around the streets
every day feeling fine but carrying the killer virus.
Spreading
like wildfire (Return
to Index)
In every country of the world each person with HIV
has on average infected one other person within a few months. The
time it takes for one to infect two to infect four to infect eight
to infect sixteen and so on is called the 'doubling time'. A common
cold spreads fast, and has maybe a doubling time of about a week.
So on the first day of term one person has a cold.
Over, the following weeks the numbers only rise slowly at first:
one, then two, -then four, then eight, then sixteen, then thirty-two.
After the fifth week of term something dramatic happens and sixty-four
new people go down with a cold. The week after it is even worse
and 128 are sniffing and sneezing. After another week 256 are feeling
rotten and the week after that 512 want to have a day off.
Actually it is not quite that bad. If 512 people have
now been infected, only 256 will still be sneezing because a cold
only lasts one week and the rest were infected over a week ago and
have got better. If the school has 1,000 pupils then in a couple
more weeks you might expect that everyone has had the cold. This
never happens because some people, for reasons we don't understand,
will manage not to get it at all.
The way the cold spread through the school shows you
how HIV can spread - but with one or two important differences.
With HIV the doubling time is not a week but often starts off in
a country at around six to twelve months. After thousands of people
have been infected, the doubling time slows down, perhaps to a couple
of years, as it would have done in the school. When there are only
100 people left in the school who have not already had the cold,
or are able to fight it off then the numbers getting it each week
will suddenly fall - say 256, then 512, then 100, then fifty, then
ten, then one. A week later no one in the school has that particular
cold.
Injecting
death (Return to Index)
It is true, however, that while the spread of HIV
through sexual contact is relatively slow, because most people do
not swop partners every day of' every week, the spread from injecting
drugs can be
extremely fast, with one addict infecting at least
one other every day. In this situation the numbers of people infected
could go over a period of weeks from one, to two, to four, to eight,
to sixteen, to thirty-two, to sixty-four, to 128, to 256, to 512
to over 1,000 . This is why Italy, New York, parts of Scotland and
other places with a bad drugs problem such as Manipur in North East
India soon had a terrible AIDS problem.
Could
the whole world die? (Return
to Index)
AIDS is unlikely to wipe us all out. Within any group,
town or nation it spreads rapidly through those most at risk, it
spreads more slowly through those at medium risk and spreads very
slowly through those at low risk. How many people are infected,
and how quickly, depends quite simply on how many people there are
in each of those groups. If we can persuade people to change from
high-risk living to low-risk living, then we can at least slow down
the spread. In Uganda the percentage of adults carrying HIV had
fallen dramatically from around 22% to 7%.
Education saves lives but it takes time to change the behaviour
of an entire community.
Who
is 'safe'? (Return to
Index)
In Italy they talk about AIDS as a plague of drug
addicts. In Africa it is known as a plague of men and women. In
the UK it was first laballed a plague affecting the gay community
... but all
that is changing. AIDS is a disease of relationships
and the virus causing it spreads along the lines relationships.
It spreads through a men's drinking club, a factory, an office,
a youth club and a school.
One thing is sure: AIDS knows no boundaries of nation,
colour, personality or sexual orientation. The virus crosses between
sexes and between people of the same sex when they have sex together,
or when blood or secretions from one person enter the blood-stream
of another.
In the UK, as in the USA, the first group to be badly
affected was the gay community. As we have seen, one group only
has to be hit a few years earlier than another to have a problem
100 times greater. That creates a misleading impression that you
only really develop AIDS if you are a member of that group.
Heads
in the sand (Return to
Index)
People always think they are safe until it is too
late - and governments are no exception. In San Francisco they knew
all about this strange new illness called AIDS that killed young
men in New York and Los Angeles. They were worried and started to
look for signs of spread into their own community. They missed it.
By the time they realised they had a problem, one in four of the
entire gay community was already infected.
It's been the same story in many parts of Africa and in Asia
regarding spread between men and women.
Many pastors have their heads in the sand.
"We don't have a problem of AIDS in our church" they tell
me.
"In that case your church must be unique", I reply.
Whenever a church is growing, people are finding faith and
lives are changing, but infection remains, unless there is a miracle.
'It
could never happen here' (Return
to Index)
In parts of central Africa it seems that one in five
of all the young men and women are already doomed by the virus.
We now know that AIDS was around in Africa, as in the USA, back
as early as the 1960s. People were dying, but even with all the
medical teams alerted, we only realised there was a single case
of AIDS in Africa in 1983. In that year we suddenly began to realise
the silent disaster in central Africa. It was possible that tens
of thousands had already perished, and millions were already infected.
For them it was too late.
Now AIDS is threatening parts of Asia in a similar
way.
In Mumbai alone over 1,000 new people are infected every
night.
I have visited villages in NE India on the Burmese border
where out of around 40,000 people, 8,000 inject heroin and 4,000
are infected.
I sat on the bed with the dying son of a pastor whose oldest
brother had already been killed by HIV.
Whole generations are being devastated.
And yet as we will see, there is a very simple answer that
costs nothing and saves millions of lives every year..
Worse
than a war (Return to Index)
If everyone infected survived HIV infection only six
weeks, the USA would be in national mourning and the economy would
be in a state of collapse. There would be mass panic. Vietnam wiped
out 50,000 American young men from the US army over ten years. With
over a million HIV infections in the US so far, AIDS makes those
war deaths look almost insignificant. Even if there is not a single
new infection in the USA after the moment you buy this book, the
death toll will be the equivalent of twenty Vietnam wars.
And in Africa?
We know that armed conflict encourages spread.
Most wars today are wars inside nations rather than between
them, causing millions of refugees to flee.
When law and order breaks down and armed militia roam the
streets or spring out of the bush to halt traffic, it becomes impossible
to run a health service or pay for it.
Prevention campaigns collapse and disease spreads. Ill-disciplined
groups of armed men often have many sexual partners, either at gunpoint
or in return for favours. All these things mean HIV spreads even
faster.
Some informal reports suggest the rate of HIV infection
in the Kenya army is up to 90% among some groups.
We know that many communities in South Africa are already
badly hot with up to one in five infected.
This is a pandemic with unimaginable impact on hundreds of
millions of people.
So who is safe then?
You are safe from AIDS if you are not infected yourself
and are faithful, to one partner, who is also not infected at the
moment and remains loyal to you and does not take risks with injecting,
or with unsafe medical treatments.
Nothing
new about AIDS? (Return
to Index)
Sex diseases have been around for thousands of years.
Syphilis infected and killed tens of thousands of people until a
treatment was found forty years ago. Gonorrhoea has continued to
spread rapidly and is now often resistant to our drugs. We have
a big problem with herpes which causes painful blisters, making
sex impossible. It comes and goes for life. There is no cure. Cancer
of the neck of the womb (cervix) is becoming more common because
you are more likely to get it if you first have sex as a teenager
and have a number of different partners. More and more women are
also finding they can't have children. This it increasingly because
of sex diseases, which damage a woman inside. Usually she doesn't
realise until the damage is done.
The
great sex age is over (Return
to Index)
In the ' swinging sixties' people talked a lot about
sexual liberation once the pill meant that a woman was safe from
getting pregnant. In the seventies, eighties and nineties there
was an explosion of sexual activity among young people, and the
number of young people needing treatment for sex diseases soared.
We are now living with the results of the sex age
where long-term relationships have not been as important as having
a good time tonight, where many people have stopped thinking twice
before jumping into bed together or before cheating on each other,
and where marriage built on faithfulness has often become meaningless.
But what has it all left us with? Our so-called 'wonderful'
sex age has left us with millions of casualties; young people who
have grown up in households that have fallen to pieces because a
parent has had several partners. You don't have to be a doctor or
a child psychiatrist to see what a disaster it has been for so many
today.
People are also having second thoughts because of
AIDS.
Ambulance
men in "space-suits' - Bored
rigid with AIDS - Chain reaction
- Spreading like wildfire
- Injecting death - Could
the whole world die? - Who is 'safe'?
- Heads in the sand - 'It
could never happen here' - Worse
than a war - Nothing new
about AIDS? - The great
sex age is over
Introduction:Christians
are Leading the Fight Against AIDS - Chapter
1:AIDS is Your Problem Too - Chapter
2:Vaccines, Treatments and Condoms - Chapter
3:Agony AIDS - Questions People Ask Chapter
4:Nowhere to Go - Chapter
5:What Do You Think? - Chapter
6:Where Are You Going? - Finally:Time
for Action - ACET
International Alliance
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