article imageMishandling the AIDS Crisis and Why Prevention Should Work With Treatment

By David Silverberg.
Subscribe to author
Published Aug 17, 2008 by  David Silverberg - 20 votes, 2 comments
Share on Facebook  
Listen - Email - Print
Recipient email:
You can enter up to 10 comma-separated email addresses.
Your email:
optional
Message:
optional

AIDS funding is tainted by religious ideology and the U.S. could learn a lot from the successful programs in China and Brazil. Those are theories at the heart of Elizabeth Pisani’s book The Wisdom of Whores: Bureaucrats, Brothels and the Business of AIDS.
Digital Journal — “We need to start telling the truth.” Elizabeth Pisani tells me this bluntly when I ask her to sum up her recent book The Wisdom of Whores: Bureaucrats, Brothels and the Business of AIDS. The eye-catching title is only the lure to hook the attention to what Pisani calls the truth: relying on AIDS treatment instead of prevention is close-minded. Forget abstinence programs that don’t work, she stresses. Safe-needle injection sites, arming prostitutes with condoms and learning about HIV on the battleground level is how governments and AIDS workers should approach this issue.
An epidemiologist since 1996, Pisani has worked all over the world to study how and why people get infected with HIV. She has seen how politicians stick to palatable cause and effects, such as the relationship between gay men and HIV infection. She saw how HIV publications and conferences focused on issues of gender, poverty, and leadership rather than on condoms and clean needles.
Pisani points out the two separate AIDS in epidemics in the world – one in Africa and one in the rest of the world. It’s too easy for the U.S. to simply exports abstinence programs to other countries, throw money at Africa and say it’s done a great job. The U.S. is ignoring the HIV problem peppering its own country and abroad, she notes.
In her book, she tears a strip out of misguided HIV ideas: “HIV prevention programmes that don’t focus on reducing the likelihood that infected people will pass the virus on to uninfected people make governments, voters and even people who buy Bono’s red iPods feel like they are tackling the HIV epidemic when in fact they are completely missing the plot.”
Speaking from her London home, Pisani spoke to DigitalJournal.com about how sex workers can teach policy makers about HIV and why President Bush’s claim to fame as an AIDS activist is all bluster.
DigitalJournal.com
: Explain why you think fusing HIV treatment with prevention is the ideal route for preventing infection?
Elizabeth Pisani
: Treatment is rightly very popular among funders and activists. It’s the most successful thing we have in our response to HIV so far. It’s how we change lives, what is called the Lazarus Effect – a sufferer goes from wondering who’ll take care of the cat during hospitalization to dancing at the clubs and enjoying a full recovery. The problem is we don’t have a compassionate view of prevention, because people are less likely to give clean needles to drug injectors then they are to give drugs to those already infected.
Also, resistance issues are going to be bigger problem inevitably. HIV is an extremely wily virus that builds up resistance very quickly. The health care system hasn’t really faced the issue of the virus building up a resistance to the popular drugs.
courtesy Elizabeth Pisani
Elizabeth Pisani, author of The Wisdom of Whores, jokes around with Thai cops in Bangkok
image:42660:5::0
DigitalJournal.com
: You wrote in your book how China restored some of your optimism in dealing with HIV. You wrote: “The most populous nation in the world is making sensible scientific estimates of who is infected and who is most at risk.” What can other countries learn from China?
Pisani: They can learn the value of pragmatism. Officials took a hard look at its epidemic, which varies greatly geographically and said “OK, the south and west have problems with injection drug use, and the eastern seaboard has a problem with the sex trade. In large cities, we’ve noticed a growing gay scene and rising infection. Let’s deal with those issues now.” It reached that position partially because China is not a democracy — the government can tackle those things without worrying about losing votes or losing a seat in Congress.
But if could single out one country in the developing world giving us the single best response to HIV, it’s Brazil. They worked hard to promote the rights of people with HIV and groups facing high risk. They greatly improved the health and safety conditions in the sex trade. They were also the first country to make treatment available and free to those who needed it.
DigitalJournal.com
: You’ve also been critical of President Bush’s initiative known as the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Recently, the program’s funding jumped $15 billion up to $48 billion over the next five years. Do you think this will be Bush’s main legacy left over from his presidency?
Pisani: Yes, PEPFAR is up there as a positive initiative. But the money could’ve been used better, because the funding comes with restrictions that make it much more difficult to use it sensibly. PEPFAR caters to fundamentalist religious interests. [As Pisani wrote: “By law, 20 per cent of the PEPFAR money must be spent on HIV prevention, and one-third of that is specifically allocated to programmes that do nothing but push abstinence until marriage”]
DigitalJournal.com: Do you think the media has done a good job in reporting on AIDS-related announcements and news?
Pisani: Journalists need to talk to affected people, not just experts. They need to go Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, for instance. Why should an AIDS story be based solely on what experts say? Journalists are far too willing to swallow what a press release says. After all, they don’t want to read a 357-page UN report. But I don’t want to heap all the blame on journalists. Sometimes, scientists don’t communicate their message clearly.
For information on Pisani and her book, visit www.the-wisdom.com
article:258632:20::0
More news from: Brazil» China» United States»

Virtual goods now a $5-billion global industry

With minutes to go before the end of the day, you visit Facebook and send out a quick birthday cake to a friend. It's $1 for the virtual icon that is simply displayed on their page. Sound silly? Well, these types of transactions are now worth billions.
Published 16 hours ago by  KJ Mullins in Internet | 1 comment

What Facebook, Twitter, PayPal can teach us about going viral Special

Going viral isn't a finger-snap way to achieve mass popularity. In fact, as author Adam L. Penenberg explains to Digitaljournal.com, some of the top tech companies found viral success by creating a product that had to be shared to be useful.
Published 19 hours ago by  David Silverberg in Internet | 1 comment

TopFinds: Investigating Dental Health in U.S., Rihanna Speaks Out

The dental health insurance controversy in the U.S. The shocking mass killing at Fort Hood, Texas. Rihanna breaks her silence about domestic abuse. These are the top stories making headlines around the world.
Published Nov 6, 2009 by  David Silverberg in Internet

Alleged Orlando Shooter Apprehended

According to Orlando police, Orlando shooting suspect Jason Rodriguez has been captured without incident. Rodriguez was captured at his mother's house around 2:20 this afternoon.
Published Nov 6, 2009 by  Joe Gullo in Crime | 1 comment

Figure skater Elvis Stojko marks beginning of music career

Elvis Stojko, a two-time Olympic silver medalist, released the first single from his new album "100 Lifetimes" yesterday. It marks the beginning of the skating champion's music career.
Published Nov 6, 2009 by  Kevin Jess in Entertainment
apis-129186 apis-129159 apis-129155 apis-129156 apis-129148
Email:
Password:
Remember meForgot password?