home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac 1990s
/
Time_Almanac_1990s_SoftKey_1994.iso
/
time
/
012290
/
01221011.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-04-15
|
9KB
|
191 lines
<text id=90TT0175>
<link 93TG0000>
<link 93AC0193>
<link 90TT1698>
<link 89TT3365>
<link 89TT2622>
<title>
Jan. 22, 1990: The AIDS Political Machine
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Jan. 22, 1990 A Murder In Boston
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 24
The AIDS Political Machine
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By demanding enormous research funds and questionable drugs,
have activists distorted the response to the epidemic?
</p>
<p>By Dick Thompson
</p>
<p> Good news rarely kicks up controversy, but this may be an
exception. A report soon to be published by the national
Centers for Disease Control estimates that the size of the AIDS
epidemic is significantly smaller than originally projected.
Since 1986, the Federal Government has claimed that as many as
1.5 million Americans were infected with the incurable virus.
The number soon to be announced will be around 1 million, and
some Government officials suggest that the count could be as
low as 650,000. Also, the rate of new infections in New York
City, Los Angeles and San Francisco is at last slowing. "In
retrospect," says the CDC report, those earlier estimates,
"based upon limited data available at the time, were too high."
</p>
<p> Why the controversy? Because AIDS lobbyists insisted all
along that the scope of the epidemic was being understated. By
doing so, AIDS activists overcame conservative resistance and
rightfully elevated the fight against the disease to the top
of the nation's public-health agenda. Says June Osborn, chair
of the National AIDS Commission: "We should not be content or
comfortable. The national response to an out-of-control
epidemic has been frighteningly modest."
</p>
<p> But now that the picture is brightening statistically after
a decade of gloom, many research scientists and health-policy
analysts question whether the changes wrought by AIDS activists
harm basic research, the public health and perhaps even those
who are at risk of acquiring the virus. Says Joel Hay, a health
economist and senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution:
"Things are out of whack." Three areas merit special concern:
</p>
<p>-- A swollen budget. After an initially sluggish response by
the Reagan Administration, Washington has pumped current AIDS
funding to a robust $1.6 billion. That is slightly more than
the budget for cancer ($1.5 billion), which killed more than
twelve times as many people last year (500,000, compared with
40,000 who died from AIDS). And it is far greater than the $610
million budget for heart disease, the nation's top killer.
"It's wrong to spend more money on a disease that will never
kill more than 35,000 to 40,000 people a year than on a disease
that will kill a half-million every year," says Michael
Fumento, author of the recently published Myth of Heterosexual
AIDS.
</p>
<p>-- Cures first, prevention second. The most effective means of
controlling a contagious epidemic is through prevention. But
the AIDS movement has emphasized the rapid development of
treatments for AIDS victims. Says Michael Nesline of the
activist group ACT UP: "We're fighting for people for whom the
question of prevention is a moot point." In this regard, the
movement found allies in conservative politicians who were
unable to support "safe sex" education but saw AIDS research as
politically neutral.
</p>
<p> Consequently, spending on drug development has outpaced
funding of prevention programs 2 to 1. Some public-health
officials fear that the concentration on cures has been at the
expense of educating Americans who remain at risk--primarily
blacks and Hispanics of the inner cities of the East. Thus the
epidemic in those ghettos is likely to grow. Says Samuel Thier,
president of the National Academy of Sciences' Institute of
Medicine: "We should have known that focusing largely on
treatment after infection would not be an adequate long-range
strategy."
</p>
<p> The emphasis on AIDS research is also beginning to draw fire
from scientists whose non-AIDS projects have been squeezed for
funds. Traditionally, major health efforts have fueled broad
basic-research programs. But "AIDS money is targeted," observes
Donald Fredrickson, former director of the National Institutes
of Health. The narrow focus reduces the chances of spin-off
discoveries for other diseases. Says David Korn, dean of the
Stanford School of Medicine: "The course of discovery in
biology is not linear. When you target money too narrowly, you
exclude other areas that may prove to be very fruitful."
</p>
<p>-- Lowered standards for drug approval. Almost as soon as drugs
are shown to be somewhat effective, the AIDS lobby pushes for
their immediate release. To overcome bureaucratic delays, some
activists have launched so-called underground testing of drugs
that have been of questionable value. The lobby's greatest
influence has been at the Food and Drug Administration. AZT,
for example, won Government approval in less than four months,
compared with a current average of two years. Says James Todd,
senior vice president of the American Medical Association:
"It's distorted all the traditional principles for drug
approval. Penicillin couldn't get through that fast." While
some modification of FDA regulations may have been necessary,
many people believe that the changes being made at the FDA to
accommodate AIDS activists threaten a system that has protected
the public from quack cures, like the apricot pits once touted
for cancer sufferers.
</p>
<p> The AIDS lobby has been so successful because early on it
grasped a fundamental principle of American research. Explains
Philip Lee, University of California at San Francisco professor
of social medicine: "The system is a political process." By
using Washington connections, media savvy and even civil
disobedience, the AIDS movement may have become the most
effective disease lobby in the history of medicine. Says Jeff
Levi, former executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian
Task Force: "Long after AIDS is gone, we will have changed how
research is done in this country."
</p>
<p> Certainly every disease has its lobby. But AIDS is the first
deadly epidemic to strike an already organized political
constituency, the gay-rights movement, which began with a
fundamental distrust of mainstream society, including organized
medicine. The AIDS lobby, says Columbia law school professor
Harold Edgar, "is independent of and really indifferent to the
interests of the scientific establishment." AIDS lobbyists have
often been motivated by fear and anger about public
indifference, or even hostility, to their terrible problem. AIDS
activism "has to do with racism and homophobia," says Nesline
of ACT UP. "What's new is that queers and junkies started doing
something about it."
</p>
<p> Translating the grass-roots movement into legislation was
the work of the National Organizations Responding to AIDS.
Representing 150 health and civil rights groups, NORA
orchestrates long-range strategy and shepherds all AIDS
legislation through Congress. "The coalition provides an
opportunity for groups to have more influence than their size
would dictate," says William Bailey, federal-policy officer for
the American Psychological Association and a founding member of
NORA. "When you have 40 to 60 groups saying the same thing,
that's a very compelling statement."
</p>
<p> The efficient AIDS lobby towers over lobbies for other
diseases that strike just as many people. NORA executive
director Jean McGuire acknowledges, "The un levelness of the
playing field is a result of the gay community's initial
articulateness and money." That has come to mean that AIDS has
a far greater impact than the number of its victims would
dictate.
</p>
<p> If the current response to AIDS is skewed, it may be because
so much effort was required to overcome the inertia of the
Reagan years. Congress found every Reagan AIDS budget
inadequate and increased funding year after year. The AIDS
political machine is running as efficiently as ever, and any
modification of the nation's AIDS response will require a more
dispassionate approach among activists.
</p>
<p> Still, AIDS remains a significant problem worldwide. And
while researchers have made tremendous strides in drug
development, these drugs are expensive and more difficult to
use elsewhere, especially in the hardest-hit areas of Africa.
The challenge to American researchers now is to find not only
better treatments but also treatments that are low in cost and
easy to use.
</p>
<p> Fundamentally, the problem is that scientists are better at
making pleas for more money than at setting priorities for
research. "There's a lot more to do [in science] than money to
do it with," says Stanford's Korn. "Without priorities, we're
left to well-organized lobbyists. That's the American way."
Bumper stickers and demonstrations may be acceptable in picking
a mayor, but the political process is proving to be a mixed
blessing when confronting an epidemic.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>