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- Newsgroups: sci.med.aids
- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!ucla-cs!usenet
- From: Billi Goldberg <bigoldberg@igc.apc.org>
- Subject: The New Activism
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.030244.22858@cs.ucla.edu>
- Note: Copyright 1992, Dan R. Greening. Non-commercial reproduction allowed.
- Sender: usenet@cs.ucla.edu (Mr Usenet)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: sole.cs.ucla.edu
- Archive-Number: 6695
- Organization: unspecified
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 92 18:45:05 PST
- Approved: phil@wubios.wustl.edu (J. Philip Miller)
- Lines: 114
-
- The following article was printed in the San Francisco Sentinel on
- Thursday, December 31, 1992. It is being posted with the permission of
- the author, Charles R. Caulfield.
- ************************************************************************
- 1992 AND THE EMERGENCE OF THE NEW ACTIVISM
- by Charles R. Caulfield
-
- Two of the most reputable leaders in the AIDS medical community
- admitted this year for the first time the futility of the current regime
- of antiviral treatments for HIV. Paul Volberding and Donald Abrams, both
- physician pioneers in antiviral drug therapy for HIV, wrote editorials
- in BETA (the Bulletin of Experimental Treatments for AIDS) that although
- the currently used drug therapies, AZT, ddI, ddC may show a transient
- increase in CD4s, they do not extend survival time, but merely delay the
- onset of symptoms. Abrams quotedthe famous study, "AZT: Five Years
- Later", in which the authors (McLeod and Hammer) state that 'the effects
- of early therapy on survival and the optimal time to initiate therapy
- remain controversial", even for "the cornerstone of antiretroviral
- therapy." (namely AZT). At this Abrams lamented, "we really must face
- the critical issue and not pooh-pooh survival in favor of modest
- transient increases in CD4 counts, or even significantly decreased short
- term disease progression."
-
- The 8th International Conference on AIDS clearly demonstrated that
- previously promising new therapies had shown no efficacy, and that there
- existed no meaningful new antiviral treatments in development. One of
- the most noteworthy components of the Conference was the single didactic
- module on alternative treatments, highlighting nutrition, Chinese
- Medicine, DNCB and potential treatments from outside the mainstream.
-
- This year saw the virtual collapse of Project Inform, cheerleader
- and pimp for the drug industry's new toxic "drug of the week". Act-Up
- has been reduced to approximately 30 ineffectual individuals, down from
- what was once a membership of hundreds of effective activists.
-
- Abrams in his essay states what few doctors dare to admit publicly:
- "The ultimate progression of HIV disease, unfortunately, continues to be
- towards death as an endpoint." This despite all the billions spent on
- drug research.
-
- In calling to the public eye these discrepancies between theory and
- practice, a highly evolved meta-network of computer Bulletin Boards,
- triggered by individuals researching the science which is not being
- discussed by conventional university researchers who fiercely guard
- their own prurient agenda and research dollars. Joining these
- individuals in their electronic communications are clinicians and
- scientists who see all too clearly the futility of the mainstream
- treatments options. The evolution of such a complex system of
- instantaneous communication has allowed a worldwide dialogue which has
- clearly begun to drive the agenda of the AIDS treatment development,
- making full use of what is now known in the fields of Immunology and
- other relevant disciplines in the design of treatments for AIDS.
-
- The Establishment's failure to cure this disease has largely been a
- by-product of institutional territoriality between virologists,
- molecular biologists and oncologists. The computerized system of
- instantaneous access to information now allows specialists to share with
- and learn from other clinicians, the patients themselves and the new
- "lay learned" - individuals, who dissatisfied with the current lack of
- progress, have taken it upon themselves to learn the basic science and
- engage with full credibility in the dialogue surrounding the formulation
- of therapies for AIDS.
-
- Some of these computer bulletin boards engender a dialogue between
- scientists and activists in the U.S., Brazil, The U.K., South Africa,
- and all parts of the U.S. One such service is the HIV/AIDS BBS, operated
- by Sister Mary Elizabeth, a nun belonging to the order of the Sisters of
- Elizabeth of Hungary in San Juan Capistrano, CA. Their bulletin board
- service makes available the texts of all primary AIDS publications,
- abstracts of Medical Journal references on AIDS, FDA reports, and the
- Centers for Disease Control daily summaries. The AEGIS (AIDS Education
- and General Information Service ) AIDS Dialogue, AEGIS AIDS Data,
- Fidonet International AIDS /ARC, and USENET sci.med.aids are all
- international vehicles for interactive dialogue which allows a give and
- take discussion and debate on all subjects pertaining to AIDS treatment.
- Rather than waiting for the lengthy process of medical journal
- publication, professionals have available to them instantaneous peer
- review of their theories and treatment regimens by tens of thousands of
- interdisciplinary practitioners, as well as by knowledgeable PWAs.
-
- Membership in International Global Communications in San Francisco
- allows access to sci.med.aids for a nominal fee. All other bulletin
- board services discussed here offer membership free of charge, which
- includes the ability to post and receive questions, answers and
- hypotheses.
-
- This rapid exchange of important information is in stark contrast to
- what is available to old regime treatment advocates, who had to rely on
- "snail-mail", which is both time consuming and expensive, and possibly
- outdated by the time it is received by the subscriber. The one
- exception to this is AIDS Treatment News, which has always freely and
- readily allowed computer bulletin board access.
-
- Many scientists, doctors and researchers, due to abject computer
- illiteracy, are not utilizing this method of rapid communication and
- are being left behind, giving computer savvy activists a pronounced
- advantage in the acquisition of the most up-to-date information, and the
- dialogue needed to make heads or tails of it.
-
- In the development of this network of information exchange,
- institutional and disciplinary boundaries are being circumvented,
- allowing for the free exchange of information which will be so vital to
- the cure for this disease. For information on HIV/AIDS Info BBS, or
- other AEGIS Network Affiliates, one can contact Sisters of St. Elizabeth
- of Hungary, Attn: AIDS/HIV Info BBS, P.O. Box 184, San Juan Capistrano,
- CA 92693-0184. (714) 248-2836.
-
- In 1992 the Sentinel has stood well above the middle of the road
- stance of most of the popular gay press, allowing for airing of
- alternative theories on the origin and treatment of AIDS. We will
- continue to offer throughout the coming year thoroughly researched,
- credible data on AIDS treatments, to allow our readers to have the
- information which is critical to making informed treatment choices.
- Happy New Year. May 1993 be the year of the Cure.
-