Geshekter et al value Mbeki critique December 28, 2006 | posted by Nigerian Muse (Archives)
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Three international
scholars from different continents review the subject, in an essay entitled
"AIDS, Medicine and Public Health: The Scientific Value of Thabo Mbeki's
Critique of AIDS Orthodoxy." The three authors want comments.
AIDS, Medicine and Public
Health: The Scientific Value of Thabo Mbeki's Critique of AIDS Orthodoxy
Charles L. Geshekter
Department of History
California State University, Chico
Chico, California 95929-0735
chollygee@earthlink.net
Sam Mhlongo, M.D.
Department of Family Medicine
Medical University of South Africa
P.O. Box 222
Medunsa, South Africa
smmhlong@iafrica.com
Claus Köhnlein, M.D.
24103 Kiel Königsweg 14
Germany
Koehnlein-Kiel@t-online.de
1. Introduction
In his installation address at the University of Witwatersand in 1998,
Vice Chancellor Colin Bundy reminded the audience that a university "must
encourage its academics and students never to take knowledge as given, as
fixed: they must recognize that knowledge is 'socially sustained and invested
with interests and backed by power'."
This advice was forgotten when scientists and activists gathered in Durban for
the 13th International AIDS Conference in July 2000 - then again in
Barcelona/2002 and in Bangkok/2004. They ignored the many paradoxes and
contradictions that arouse serious concern about the reliability of African
AIDS research. In the United States, where AIDS was first identified, an
imprecision about the definition of the syndrome and its causation (abetted by
a lack of journalistic and social science scrutiny) still clouds the public's
understanding of HIV and AIDS.
This paper evaluates how the assumptions and claims that turned "AIDS is
everywhere" into an American cliché are being perpetuated in Africa. It
scrutinizes the predictions of increased numbers of AIDS cases in Africa to
show how conceptual flaws and questionable statistics mar conventional
studies. It suggests that western stereotypes, poorly designed research and
racist claims about African sexuality have created the untenable conclusions
about AIDS now proliferating in Africa.
In a critique of armchair empiricism that applies to much AIDS research, Margo
Russell and Mary Mugyenyi showed how analysts often squeeze "African data into
inappropriate Western categories" and "international agencies, with their
passion for international comparison...exert a strong pressure for just the
kind of standardization that sociologists should be well-placed to reject."
In many ways, AIDS has become a great diversion. The belief that behavior
modification will cure poverty disguises the endemic conditions that cause the
appearance of the "symptoms" in the first place. Many AIDS activists and
researchers ignore the complexity of historical forces that propelled parts of
Africa into a downward economic spiral beginning in the late 1970s that set
the stage for the appearance of "AIDS."
In the Reagan Era, a "Washington Consensus" dominated official thinking about
economic development in the U.S. government, the IMF, the World Bank and
private banks and foundations. It called for sharp cutbacks in government
spending, financial liberalization, privatization of state-owned enterprises,
deregulation and the supremacy of the market over all other values, policies
that contributed mightily to the demise of Africa. According to Joseph
Stiglitz, an economist formerly with the World Bank, during the 1990s, the
number of people living in extreme poverty (less than $2 per day) increased by
nearly 100 million, world-wide, with the disproportionate amount being found
in Africa.
Countries in east and southern Africa became so indebted to and dependent on
international financial institutions that they were no longer free to make
basic decisions about which goods and services could be allocated. Beginning
in the late 1970s, corruption and decay in the public health field, sharp
decreases in the prices of exported commodities, severe restrictions on social
services due to the IMF and World Bank strictures of "structural adjustment,"
savage civil wars, declining rates of immunization, and crowded refugee camps
were among the major forces afflicting Africa as the 20th century ended. None
of these forces were related to sexual promiscuity.
2. Definitions
It is crucial to distinguish between a virus (HIV) and a syndrome
(AIDS) to recognize how ambiguous definitions help to spawn misinformation
about AIDS. A major part of this problem derives from alphabetic shorthands
that are often used interchangeably, such as HIV, HIV disease, HIV infection,
HIV/AIDS, AIDS, STD/AIDS, TB/AIDS, STD/TB/AIDS. In July 1997, the Gauteng
Health Department [South Africa] concluded that it was "outdated and
inaccurate" to say that someone "has AIDS." Rather than distinguish between
an HIV antibody test result and a case of AIDS, the Department decided it
would henceforth use the term "HIV infection" to include every stage of
infection and disease.
This shift in terminology is often overlooked in those media accounts that
predict African life expectancy or death rates based on projections of HIV
infections. Discrepancies are further evident when comparing HIV and AIDS
figures in the annual World Health Reports issued by the World Health
Organization and its Weekly Epidemiological Record (WER) with
statistics from the frequently cited Report on the Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic
that was widely distributed by UNAIDS at the XIII International AIDS
Conference in Durban (July 2000).
In November 2000, the WER provided the cumulative totals of AIDS
cases for the past 18 years in the following countries: Zimbabwe (74,782);
South Africa (12,825); Uganda (54,712); and Swaziland (3,528). The World
Health Report 1998, which "uses the latest data gathered and validated by
WHO", gave the following numbers of AIDS cases in those four countries for
1996: Zimbabwe - 9,129; South Africa - 729; Uganda -3,021; and Swaziland -
249.
When the Report on the HIV/AIDS Epidemic conflated the number of
reported AIDS cases with the estimated number of Africans said to be HIV
antibody-positive, these were the results:
|
|
Zimbabwe |
South Africa |
Uganda |
Swaziland |
|
Estimated
number living with HIV/AIDS
|
1.5
million |
4.2 million |
820,000 |
130,000 |
Conventional claims about the viral cause of AIDS rarely rely on empirical
standards of verification. For instance, a survey of adult mortality in
Lusaka, Zambia cited the most frequently reported causes of death to be "diarrhoea
(20%), malaria or fever (9%), witchcraft (7%), tuberculosis (7%), and cough
(6%). AIDS was given as the cause in 3% of deaths." The researchers breezily
concluded that since "HIV seroprevalence in Lusaka is currently 25-30%, and
given the unusual prominence of diarrhoeal disease as a cause of death, we
believe that HIV infection is largely responsible for the high death rate
[emphasis added]".
Before international donors conduct yet another knowledge-attitude-practice
survey or insist that people modify their sexual behavior, they should subject
the basic suppositions about AIDS cases in Africa to the standards of
consistency, testability and parsimony. Unless researchers concur on the
surveillance methodology used to define a case of AIDS, they will disagree on
substantive policy recommendations regarding its prevention and treatment. It
is important for scientists to gather data, weigh and interpret evidence and
verify the accuracy of the claims made by AIDS experts.
AIDS in Africa has become one of the great medical fallacies of our times.
After twenty-four years, AIDS in Africa has devolved into a series of
rhetorical gimmicks, underneath which remains a vacuum that, at its core, is
devoid of historical context. The "war on AIDS" is a political slogan, not a
coherent strategy for public health improvements, and it succeeds brilliantly
as political theater. Why have African Studies academics submitted so
willingly to this set of claims organized around sexual fears? Why do AIDS
researchers and activists become unhinged at the prospect of new thinking?
Even posing questions is often considered impermissible and anyone who raises
them usually evokes dismissive name-calling, deligitimizing, or much worse.
Why do mundane facts, the scientific method, and second thoughts seem to
matter so little to social crusaders on the hunt for improper sexual behavior?
By dogmatic repetition, the notion has been pounded into the public's mind
that HIV tests are reliable. Those who start with the concept of HIV as a
retrovirus that causes AIDS, quickly seize on any decline in HIV rates as
proof or evidence that AIDS cases are receding.
The confusion that deters us from thinking carefully about AIDS in Africa is
borne of several factors: 1) racist claims about African sexuality and
assumptions about truck drivers and prostitutes that have achieved the status
of "urban legends;" 2) conjured up statistics that evaporate whenever one
tries to pin them down specifically to a metropolitan area or the province of
any country; 3) an inability to distinguish the unreliability of HIV antibody
tests from the clinical symptoms of an "AIDS" case; and 4) an unfamiliarity
with the nature of political economies of African states since the late
1970s. Nowhere are these factors more pronounced than in contemporary South
Africa.
And it is South Africans who have begun to demand more reliable data
concerning HIV infection rates and actual AIDS cases. The editor of the
South African Medical Journal, Daniel Ncayiyana, questioned the uncritical
way that HIV and AIDS statistics are selectively gathered from women at
antenatal clinics, then extrapolated as somehow representative of the entire
country. He pointed out that a "gaping discrepancy in prevalence between
KwaZulu-Natal and the eastern Cape remains unelucidated" and wondered why the
"actual trail of infection from the city to rural areas has not been properly
traced."
In late 1999, President Thabo Mbeki directed his Minister of Health, Dr. Manto
Tsabalala-Msimang, to investigate the safety and health benefits of AZT, a
toxic and expensive drug that produces metabolic abnormalities in laboratory
animals and whose life-extending benefits remain unproven.
Dr. Tshabalala-Msimang told South African television audiences in December
1999 that she would never recommend AZT, advice echoed on the same program by
Dr. Sam Mhlongo, the Head of the Family Medicine Department at MEDUNSA. These
controversial opinions suggested that a re-appraisal of HIV/AIDS research in
Africa was underway.
In early 2000, President Mbeki appointed an AIDS Advisory Panel that consisted
of 52 researchers, scholars and activists (including the three co-authors of
this paper) who held widely discordant views on the definition, causation,
prevention and treatment of AIDS cases. Mbeki sought evidence-based answers
to three basic questions: 1) what causes the immune deficiency that leads to
death from AIDS; 2) what is the most efficacious response to this cause or
causes; and 3) why is HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa heterosexually
transmitted while in the western world it is said to be largely homosexually
transmitted?
Mbeki applied the principle of "Occam's razor" to AIDS, the scientific rule
that the simplest of competing theories is preferred to the more complex, that
explanations of unknown phenomena are to be sought first in terms of known
quantities. The essence of the scientific method is to frame and
operationalize a hypothesis "whose predictions comport with observable results
in a consistent manner. If the hypothesis is valid and testable, its result
should be generally reproducible, rather than unique to a particular
experiment."
As an economist, Mbeki questioned the authority of the international AIDS
establishment because he was not convinced that sexual behavior, rather than
poverty and malnutrition, were "at the root of his country's medical woes."
As a political leader concerned about his nation's well being, he sought
credible explanations for how an alleged "disease" could be defined with such
decisive differences from one continent to another. Mbeki felt that light
could be shed on these issues in a public dialogue about public health,
politics, and scientific accuracy.
Interested in academic risk-taking, Mbeki unwittingly stirred up a hornet's
nest and furious international swarming began immediately. It become apparent
that those intent on "fighting AIDS" had adopted a missionary-style crusade,
evidently similar to "fighting apartheid" in the minds of many "activists"
whose lives seemed to be on a "permanent campaign" of some sort. Their
reliance on military metaphors, apocalyptic visions, and the withering scorn
shown toward any disagreement reflected a zealotry that brooked no opposition
or dissent. Outside the Durban Conference Center at the 2000 AIDS Conference,
demonstrators held signs that advocated, "one dissident, one bullet," neatly
capturing the anti-science militancy of AIDS activists.
The AIDS orthodoxy has long rejected unconventional views and stifled what
ought to have been a lively, inclusive debate on issues ranging from
statistics and epidemiology to science, economic history, and notions about
African sexuality. They believe that if anyone dares to question their core
beliefs, he commits a great evil. This is not something they can prove
logically or explain rationally -- it is, for them, simply an article of
faith.
Thabo Mbeki challenged their faith and ignited an overdue debate in crucial
ways. He created a forum and an opportunity to consider all manner of
questions. From his readings, he detected ambiguities and tautologies in the
mainline AIDS literature. Mbeki resisted pat answers and challenged many
assertions. He insisted that we consider a different causal reality in terms
of what was making South Africans ill. Mbeki did something that AIDS experts
and other African leaders rarely did: he defied the professional consensus
about HIV/AIDS and opened his mind to new ideas.
After several acrimonious meetings in South Africa (May and July 2000)
followed by a robust set of internet exchanges among its members, the
Presidential AIDS Advisory Panel issued a synthesis of its findings; its March
2001 report failed to reach a consensus but carefully articulated several
opposing viewpoints.
Millions of Africans have long suffered from severe weight loss, chronic
diarrhea, fever and persistent coughs. In 1985, western researchers suddenly
reconfigured this cluster of symptoms into a new syndrome (AIDS), which they
declared was caused by a single virus - HIV - that could be transmitted
through sexual contact. American health officials accept this HIV/AIDS
model to explain the clinical manifestations of impoverished living conditions
in Africa. There are several reasons why Mbeki realized the need for careful
reconsideration.
First, many Africans who qualify for an AIDS diagnosis - perhaps as many as
70% - turn out to be negative when tested for HIV according to the Western
Blot.
Second, this African HIV/AIDS model failed to predict the course of AIDS in
the United States. Since the clinical symptoms that define an AIDS case are
widespread in the general African population, if it transmits heterosexually
it should also become widespread in other general populations, such as
Americans, in which hundreds of thousands of heterosexuals annually contract
venereal diseases. Instead, 23 years after it was first described in the
medical literature in the United States, AIDS remains confined to special risk
groups. Of the 40,000 annual American AIDS patients, nearly 90% are either
drug users or homosexuals and fewer than 10,000 are identified as heterosexual
cases.
Third, sexual transmission cannot explain the differences in alleged rates of
HIV positivity between African (about five per 100) and American (about one
per 7000) heterosexuals. When the HIV/AIDS paradigm debuted in 1984, its
proponents assumed that HIV was easily transmitted coitally. When scientists
actually tested this idea ten years later, they arrived at extremely low
coital transmission frequencies. Researchers routinely classify HIV infection
as a sexually transmitted disease (STD) without acknowledging the
extraordinary difficulty of the sexual transmission of HIV.
Studies by Nancy Padian and her associates demonstrate that the infectivity
rate for male-to-female transmission is extremely low, "approximately 0.0009
per contact," while female-to-male transmission is eight times less
efficient. In other words, an HIV-negative woman may convert to positive on
average only after one thousand unprotected contacts with an
HIV-positive man. An HIV-negative man may become positive on average only
after eight thousand contacts with an HIV-positive woman. These data
suggest two mutually exclusive conclusions. Either HIV is not a sexually
transmitted microbe at all and other factors must account for HIV
seroprevalence, or else African heterosexuals are more promiscuous than
American heterosexuals, an unproven assumption rooted in hoary racist
stereotypes.
With this in mind, why did so many public health professionals and officials
come to view the diseases of poverty in Africa as sexually contagious? How
can one virus cause twenty-nine heterogeneous AIDS indicator diseases almost
entirely among males in Europe and America but afflict African men and women
in nearly equal numbers? The answer is that the World Health Organization
uses a definition of AIDS in Africa that differs decisively from the one used
in the West. The origins of this definition of African AIDS are quite
illuminating.
3. Defining AIDS in Africa
Joseph McCormick and Susan Fisher-Hoch were physicians from the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control (CDC) who were instrumental in convening the WHO
conference in the Central African Republic in 1985 that produced the "Bangui
Definition" of AIDS in Africa. The CDC had just adopted the HIV/AIDS model to
explain immune disorders found among American drug injectors, transfusion
recipients, and a small cohort of promiscuous urban gay men. There was a
tendency for HIV antibodies to react with plasma from some of these patients.
The same was apparently true of blood from Africans afflicted with the
diseases of poverty. The infectious viral model of AIDS assumed that immune
deficiency would spread via HIV to a much larger faction of Africans than
those who tested positive for the antibodies.
McCormick and Fisher-Hoch accepted this model. Here is how they explained
their motivation for the Bangui Conference and the rationale behind the AIDS
definition that resulted from it:
"We still had an urgent need to begin to estimate the size of the AIDS problem
in Africa....But we had a peculiar problem with AIDS. Few AIDS cases in Africa
receive any medical care at all. No diagnostic tests, suited to widespread
use, yet existed....In the absence of any of these markers [e.g., diagnostic
T4/T8 white cell tests], we needed a clinical case definition....a set of
guidelines a clinician could follow in order to decide whether a certain
person had AIDS or not. [If we] could get everyone at the WHO meeting in
Bangui to agree on a single, simple definition of what an AIDS case was in
Africa, then, imperfect as the definition might be, we could actually
start to count the cases, and we would all be counting roughly the same thing.
[emphasis added]
The definition was reached by consensus, based mostly on the delegates'
experience in treating AIDS patients. It has proven a useful tool in
determining the extent of the AIDS epidemic in Africa, especially in areas
where no testing is available. Its major components were prolonged fevers (for
a month or more), weight loss of 10 percent or greater, and prolonged
diarrhea..."
The doctors recalled that:
"experts in STDs continued to regale us with tales of the excessive and often
bizarre sexual practices associated with HIV in the West...we were also
beginning to see a direct correlation between the number of sexual partners
and the rate of infection...Compared to the West, heterosexual contacts in
Africa are frequent, and relatively free of social constraints - at least for
the men....There was every reason to believe that, having found heterosexually
transmitted AIDS in Kinshasa, we were likely to find it everywhere else in the
world."
It was upon these unsubstantiated claims, clinical generalizations, western
notions of sexual morality and stereotypes about Africans that AIDS became a
disease by definition. Africa was assigned a central role in the premise that
AIDS was everywhere and everyone was at risk. By 1986, "people were
falling over one another to get involved in AIDS research," recalled the
physicians. "They realized that AIDS represented an opportunity for grant
money, training, and the possibility of professional advancement....A certain
bandwagon mentality took hold. Careers and reputations were riding on the
outcome."
As proof that these AIDS symptoms were sexually transmitted, McCormick and
Fisher-Hoch relied on a narrow survey conducted by Kevin DeCock, another CDC
epidemiologist. DeCock examined stored blood samples taken in 1976 (for Ebola
virus testing) from 600 residents of the small town of Yambuku, in northern
Zaire. Samples from five patients (0.8%) tested positive for HIV antibodies.
DeCock wanted to know what happened to those five people during the
intervening ten years. According to McCormick and Fisher-Hoch:
"three of the five were dead. To determine if their deaths were attributable
to AIDS, Kevin interviewed people who had known them. The friends and
relatives of the deceased described an illness marked by severe weight loss
and other ailments that left little doubt in Kevin's mind that they had
succumbed to AIDS [emphasis added]."
DeCock concluded from these interviews that the subjects had died from AIDS,
and that HIV had caused their death. He reached this conclusion without
matching the five HIV-positive patients with peers from among the 595
HIV-negative subjects and without collecting mortality data and morbidity
information about them. Had he done this, perhaps he would have discovered
that numerous HIV-negative Africans also die of severe weight loss and other
so-called AIDS conditions.
DeCock further noted that antibody tests conducted in 1986 showed that the HIV
prevalence in Yambuku had remained constant at 0.8% during the ten years since
1976. As far as he was concerned, this meant that HIV - and thus AIDS - really
originated in Africa where it had existed for years in small numbers of rural
inhabitants whom he imagined had contracted it from primates. He speculated
that once some of those people in the late 1970s migrated to what he assumed
were sexually promiscuous urban areas, an epidemic of HIV and AIDS exploded.
DeCock did not consider that these same data could have been interpreted as
indicating that HIV is a mild virus and difficult to transmit. Neither did
McCormick and Fisher-Hoch.
The presumptive diagnosis employed by DeCock is known as a "verbal autopsy."
It is widely accepted in Africa, where "no country has a vital registration
system that captures a sufficient number of deaths to provide meaningful death
rates." While medically certified information is available for less than 30%
of the estimated 51 million deaths that occur each year worldwide, the Global
Burden of Disease Study (GBD) found that sub-Saharan Africa had the greatest
uncertainty for the causes of mortality and morbidity since its vital
registration figures were the lowest of any region in the world - a
microscopic 1.1%.
When the mainstream media use the term "AIDS-related illness," they accept the
sweepingly wide set of clinical symptoms that suddenly came to "define" an
AIDS case anywhere in Africa in October 1985 and has remained in place ever
since.
4. AIDS and
Historiography: A Case Study from East Africa
As a case study in how scholarship about recent African history may be
marred by an over-emphasis on HIV/AIDS, we examine an otherwise fine book by
John Illiffe, East African Doctors: A History of the Modern Profession.
Based on extensive archival research and a meticulous review of the vernacular
press, this study by a leading historian of Africa explains how Africans
became physicians in 20th century Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. The writing is
lucid and compelling, the arguments rich with personal anecdotes and insights.
At the outset, Iliffe states, "Not since the origins of mankind has East
Africa been so important to the world as it is today. The special importance
comes from the AIDS epidemic" Claiming that East African doctors have
charted the "epidemiology of heterosexually transmitted AIDS" and devised
control strategies, Iliffe eventually ends his book "as it began, with AIDS"
His historical analysis is framed by assumptions about AIDS that warrant
careful scrutiny.
Chapters two through nine of East African Doctors epitomize Iliffe's
cogent style of historical reconstruction. The chapters on post-colonial
public health document how deteriorating political economies (not some
rainforest virus) produced the classic symptoms of sickness - fever,
persistent cough, diarrhea and weight loss - that American researchers
re-defined as a new and distinct illness (AIDS) in the early 1980s, declaring
it was caused by a single virus (HIV) which could be transmitted through
sexual contact.
Under colonial education systems, an elite corps of African trainees dissected
cadavers, learned precision in dosages and relied on microscopes "to embody
rationality and enlightenment" In the 1940s, Ugandan physician Sebastiano
Kyewalyanga promoted hospitals and doctors for babies so Africans would
achieve "better health, stressing regular breastfeeding, hygiene, nutrition,
better housing, [and] the advantages of modern medical aid" Bernard Omondi, a
Kenyan doctor in the 1950s, diagnosed the causes of death at Kerugoya district
hospital - pneumonia, gastroenteritis, tuberculosis and kwashiorkor - as a
"syndrome with malnutrition at its root," due primarily to socio-economic
changes. The writings of these men impressed Iliffe "by how optimistic they
were at this time of their ability to improve their societies."
Chapters 7-9 provide the plausible context for the public health debacles that
set the stage for AIDS: the violence and social chaos in Uganda, corruption
and financial stringency that attended capitalist development in Kenya, and
flawed attempts to transform the medical system in a socialist direction in
Tanzania. After independence, public health was weakened throughout East
Africa by fiscal constraints, population growth, the spread of tuberculosis,
and such endemic environmental diseases as "malaria in the lowlands and
respiratory infections in the highlands."
During Idi Amin's destructive regime (1971-79), per capita income in Uganda
declined by 6.2% per year and the Ministry of Health's real expenditure per
person fell 85% while the country endured cholera and typhus epidemics, a
major expansion of sleeping sickness and the worst measles epidemic in its
history. At Mulago Hospital and Medical School, the water supply broke down
for a decade, the mortuary's refrigeration system collapsed, sewerage ceased
to function, no X-ray units worked, and the food store was "full of rats and
vermin."
Insecurity persisted after Amin's ouster. Immunization rates among Ugandan
infants in 1985 were only 13% for polio, 17% for measles, and 37% for
tuberculosis. The illicit sale of pharmaceuticals grew rampant as
self-medication with illegal drugs was the "surrogate for a collapsing medical
system" in a country whose GDP per capita in 1985 remained 43 per cent lower
than in 1970. "The accumulated deterioration made the late 1980s the nadir of
health services," writes Iliffe, when "the pain and squalor of dilapidated
hospitals" left them with little water, electricity, sewerage, equipment,
transport or drugs.
A similar degeneration affected Kenya. The open selling of drugs, "apart from
...the possibility of poisoning," alarmed doctors because "it bred drug
resistance." By 1992, "the dose of penicillin needed to cure gonococcal
infection had increased over a hundredfold"
Tanzania shifted expenditures and doctors from urban hospitals to village
health centers to cultivate ujamaa egalitarianism. Despite successful
mass immunizations against measles, polio, and tetanus, public health worsened
by the 1980s. Health facilities "were often dilapidated and the staff
demoralized, chiefly for lack of money in a country whose real Gross National
product per capita had fallen by an average of 0.5 per cent a year between
1965 and 1988." According to Iliffe, "[P]overty-related conditions like
malnutrition, malaria and diarrhoea were ... treated least effectively.
Poverty explained why the main complaint against health facilities was lack of
drugs, for poverty not only prevented their procurement and distribution but
corrupted the medical staff who sold them for their own profit."
In his concluding chapters, Iliffe appears undisturbed by the major role of
pharmaceutical corporations in funding AIDS research, has no qualms about the
zealotry of sexual behavior modification programs imported from the West, is
not skeptical about the infectious viral theory of immuno-deficiency, and
never questions whether "AIDS" really exists as a "new" disease.
Iliffe simply calls AIDS a "plague," a "death sentence," and a "general
malaise" marked by sporadic fever, weight loss, persistent cough and periodic
diarrhea. These are also the clinical symptoms of malaria, tuberculosis or
malnutrition. He seems not to know that HIV tests do not detect a virus
itself, only viral antibodies that are analyzed with an assortment of proteins
not unique to HIV.
In contrast to the media's doomsday scenarios, Iliffe quotes Dr. Anthony
Lwegaba who wisely concedes that AIDS "might not be one disease, but a
collection of diseases" and Dr. Elly Katabira who sensibly observes that
"many treatable conditions requiring hospitalization occur in AIDS
patients." Iliffe even allows that "if properly treated, most AIDS patients
improved before leaving hospital," and that "although AIDS was incurable,
chronic, infectious and widespread...it was also treatable, long-survived,
[and] hard to transmit."
As our paper attempts to show, the clinical symptoms that define AIDS in
Africa seem to appear in roughly equal numbers among men and women, not
because of heterosexual transmission, but because the socio-economic
conditions that produce those symptoms are caused by environmental insults to
which many impoverished Africans - male and female - are regularly exposed.
Malnourished individuals or those who suffer from malaria, tuberculosis or
repeated attacks of dysentery have many cross-reacting antibodies in their
systems making it impossible to prove that any one particular microbe was the
cause of the symptoms. The best predictors for an AIDS diagnosis in Africa
are economic deprivation, protein malnutrition, poor sanitation and parasitic
infections, not extraordinary sexual behavior or antibodies for a virus that
has proven difficult to isolate directly.
John Illiffe has written a superb historical analysis of the East African
medical profession. Although it probably wasn't his intention, his seminal
book provides abundant data for scholars to begin a thorough reappraisal of
the real origins of "AIDS" in Africa.
5. Racism and African Sexuality
Whereas acquired immune deficiency in the industrialized countries is
almost exclusively a disease of a tiny percentage of homosexuals, intravenous
drug users and recipients of tainted blood transfusions, AIDS cases in Africa
are said to be as general and indiscriminate as such long-time African
scourges as malaria, tuberculosis, schistosomiasis, and sleeping sickness (trypanosomiasis).
This is the "heterosexual paradox" of AIDS in Africa when compared to the
United States and western Europe. Some researchers consider the paradox is
temporary. They speculate that HIV evolved or emerged first in Africa and
that, in time, AIDS will be just as rampant in the West. However, they have
said this for twenty-four years and nothing of the sort has occurred.
Other researchers account for a "permanent paradox" by suggesting that
Africans are somehow different from Westerners, are substantially more
promiscuous, and hence more likely to have genital ulcers. How else can they
explain the widespread distribution of a virus whose transmission requires,
for non-ulcerated genitals, a thousand heterosexual acts? Such insinuations
warrant the closest scrutiny since generalizations about African sexual
practices are analytically useless on an internally diversified continent of
650 million people.
At the 10th International AIDS Conference in Yokohama (August 1994), Dr.
Yuichi Shiokawa claimed that AIDS would be brought under control only if
Africans restrained their sexual cravings. Professor Nathan Clumeck of the
Université Libre in Brussels was skeptical that Africans will ever do so. In
an interview with Le Monde, Clumeck claimed that "sex, love, and
disease do not mean the same thing to Africans as they do to West Europeans
[because] the notion of guilt doesn't exist in the same way as it does in the
Judeo-Christian culture of the West." AIDS educators try to counter this
purported lack of guilt in African sexuality through conservative appeals to
restraint, negotiating safe sex and a nearly evangelical insistence on condom
use.
Many orthodox AIDS researchers glibly perpetuate racist stereotypes of
libidinous black men and women. The myths about the sexual excesses of
Africans are old indeed. Early European travelers returned from the continent
with tales of black men performing carnal feats with unbridled athleticism,
with black women who were themselves sexually insatiable. These affronts to
Victorian sensibilities were cited, alongside tribal conflicts and other
"uncivilized" behavior, as justification for colonial social control.
AIDS researchers added new twists to an old repertoire: stories of Zairians
who rub monkeys' blood into cuts as an aphrodisiac, of ulcerated genitals, and
of philandering truck drivers who get AIDS from prostitutes and then go home
to infect their wives. A facetious letter in The Lancet even cited a
passage from Lili Palmer's memoirs as evidence for how a large male
chimpanzee's "anatomically unmistakable signs of its passion for [Johnny]
Weismuller" on the Tarzan set in 1946 "may provide an explanation for the
inter-species jump" of HIV infection.
Some researchers assert that many African men prefer "dry sex" whereby women,
particularly prostitutes, are said to "insert substances, such as household
detergents or antiseptics, in their vagina prior to intercourse in order to
prevent wetness." According to a study in The Lancet, this practice
allegedly produces a "hot, tight, and dry" environment, which their men find
more pleasurable but which may "increase the risk of HIV-1 transmission, since
the substances could cause the disruption of the membranes lining the vaginal
and uterine wall."
Another theory attributed the origin of HIV to the "repeated radiation
exposure of chimpanzees and mangabey monkeys in equatorial Africa" to
strontium-90 from uranium mining in the former Belgian Congo and to radiation
from atmospheric nuclear tests in the equatorial Pacific Ocean in the 1950s
and 1960s after "radioactive fallout from them circled the globe around that
latitude." The latest speculation traced the origins of AIDS cases to live
attenuated oral polio vaccines that were accidentally contaminated in the
Congo, allegedly with tissues from a primate version of HIV.
Aside from the lack of verification to corroborate these claims, no one has
ever shown that people in Rwanda, Uganda, Zaire, and Kenya - the so-called
AIDS belt - are more sexually active than people in Nigeria which has reported
a cumulative total of only 26,276 AIDS cases out of a population of 120
million or Cameroon which reported 18,986 cases in 14 million. No
continent-wide sex surveys have ever been carried out in Africa.
Nevertheless, conventional researchers perpetuate stereotypes about insatiable
sexual appetites and carnal exotica. They assume that AIDS cases in Africa
are driven by a sexual promiscuity similar to what produced - in combination
with recreational drugs, sexual stimulants, venereal disease, and the over-use
of antibiotics - the early epidemic of immunological dysfunction among a small
sub-culture of urban gay men in the West.
Case studies from Africa suggests nothing of the sort. In 1991 researchers
from Médicins Sans Frontières and the Harvard School of Public Health surveyed
sexual behavior in Moyo district of northwest Uganda. Their findings revealed
behavior that was not very different from that of the West. On average, women
had their first sex at age 17, men at 19. Eighteen per cent of women and 50%
of men reported premarital sex; 1.6% of the women and 4.1% of the men had
casual sex in the month preceding the study, while 2% of women and 15% of men
had done so in the preceding year.
The media misrepresentations that link sexuality to AIDS have spawned
inordinate anxieties in regions of Africa already afflicted with extreme
poverty, ravaged by war, and deprived of primary health care delivery
systems. The disaster voyeurism of tabloid journalism enables the media to
use AIDS to sell "more newspapers than any other disease in history. It is a
sensational disease - with its elements of sex, blood and death it has proved
irresistible to editors across the world." In the past ten years, western
media have used unrelentlingly melancholy metaphors to portray Africans as
helpless wretches, which, according to one study, only homogenize complex
situations and ironically contributes to public apathy and "compassion
fatigue."
In this age of globalization, public health seems to require more salesmanship
than skepticism. The media's appetite for scare tactics and its disdain for
alternative perspectives enables them to treat Africa in apocalyptic terms.
Doomsday scenarios compare AIDS in Africa to the great epidemics in history
like the Black Death of the Middle Ages that killed 20 million people.
USA Today warned about "a time bomb ticking south of the Sahara" and
UNICEF called AIDS "the modern incarnation of Dante's Inferno." U.S. Senator
Diane Feinstein of California said, "I truly believe that the AIDS crisis is
worse than the bubonic plague...this crisis can wipe out sub-Saharan Africa as
we know it today. It is mega in its impact on the world..." Earlier this
year, Professor Richard Feachem, Director of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
TB, and Malaria, pronounced it "the worst disaster in recorded history."
At the 15th International AIDS Conference in Bangkok (July 2004), these images
of HIV/AIDS-ravaged Africa were taken as indisputable. Convinced that a
strange mutant retrovirus was unleashed on Africa from the rainforest to cause
AIDS, spread by promiscuous truck drivers and prostitutes, activists and
researchers have ignored the socio-economic history of modern Africa when
waging their war on AIDS. Its preferred weapons are the endless preaching of
abstinence, sexual behavior modification schemes and condom use (the ABCs),
and the prescribing of drugs of dubious effectiveness and often-demonstrated
toxicity.
The marketing of anxiety is supposed to promote the sexual behavior
modification that will help "save Africa." Some writers feel that the
manufacture of fear is a good way to increase social awareness. For
conservatives who want to see "the notion of sexual responsibility [shake] off
its puritanical image," the subsequent "public anxiety about AIDS is seen as
an important sentiment for popularizing a more restrictive and puritanical
sexual ethos."
Oblivious to the morbidity and mortality data from the Global Burden of
Disease Study, journalists reflexively maintain that "AIDS is by far the
most serious threat to life in Africa." Given the momentum behind this
assumption, few scientists question the infectious AIDS hypothesis, leaving
little reason for the media to scrutinize the premises or reliability of AIDS
research.
The claims that millions of Africans are threatened by AIDS or are already
HIV-positive make it politically acceptable to use the continent as a
laboratory for vaccine trials and for the distribution of toxic drugs of
disputed effectiveness like AZT. For instance, AZT is a toxic chemical whose
primary biochemical action is the random termination of DNA synthesis, the
central molecule of life. It is frightening to recommend giving such a
carcinogenic drug to pregnant women because fetuses cannot develop into babies
without DNA synthesis.
Moreover, media claims that safe sex is the only way to avoid AIDS
inadvertently scare Africans from visiting public health clinics for fear of
receiving an AIDS diagnosis. Even Africans "with treatable medical conditions
(such as tuberculosis) who perceive themselves as having HIV infection fail to
seek medical attention because they think that they have an untreatable
disease." Biomedical funds that used to fight malaria, tuberculosis and
leprosy are now diverted into sex counseling and condom distribution, while
social scientists shift their attention to behavior modification programs and
AIDS awareness surveys.
One such initiative - the Summertown HIV-Prevention Project - lasted three
years in an impoverished South African township. It was described as a "mixed
bag of disappointments and achievementsŠ[as] many proposed activities [were]
yet to be implemented, consistent and widespread condom use remains lowŠand
the most damning lack of Project success over the three-year research period
is the lack of evidence for any reduction in STI [sexually transmitted
infection] levels." The analysis by its Director uses such impenetrable
prose that one is not surprised by the Project's admitted lack of effect on
either sexual behavior, HIV rates, or AIDS cases. As she states in her
conclusion:
"In the interests of contributing to the development of a critical social
psychology of sexuality, the research has illustrated the way in which sexual
behaviour, and the possibility of sexual behaviour change, are determined by
an interlocking series of multi-level processes, which are often not under the
control of an individual person's rational conscious choice. Sexualities are
constructed and reconstructed at the intersection of a kaleidoscopic array of
interlocking multi-level processes, ranging from the intra-psychological to
the macro-social."
The researchers of the Summertown project accepted the theory that sexual
behavior changes would make people unsick and enable them to stay well. They
never imagined that their project failed because its core construct was
flawed, erroneous and incapable of correction. Did they ever consider that
the production of HIV antibodies was environmentally induced, having little or
nothing to do with sexuality?
In Africa, where women contract so-called "Slim Disease" in numbers roughly
equal to males, there is no evidence to link the onset of immune deficiency
with engagement in promiscuous homosexual intercourse. Intravenous drug use
seems uncommon among villagers and city dwellers. Does this mean,
deductively, that in Africa heterosexual intercourse itself puts everyone at
risk for AIDS? Does the "AIDS epidemic" in Africa portend the future of the
developed world? Many scientists, bio-medical researchers and AIDS experts
still believe this is the case.
As anyone who attended the International AIDS Conference can attest, there
were far
more signs of an openly assertive "sexual culture" of surfers, casual drug
users,
semi-nudity, porn shops, sex shops and beautiful prostitutes within one square
mile of any
hotel at South Beach in Durban than, say, one ever sees in 1000 square miles
of
Zululand and Maputaland. If AIDS in South Africa is linked to heterosexual
behavior
or condomless sex, then its epicenter should be found amidst the white
oceanfront
culture of Durban, or the leafy suburbs of north Johannesburg, or the
international swingers'
scene around Camps Bay and Sea Point in Cape Town. But those areas are, of
course, the last
places one finds AIDS cases in South Africa.
This takes us back to Thabo Mbeki. After the distinguished Harvard physician
Paul Farmer
found himself at conferences where professional colleagues went "practically
purple with
rage discussing Mbeki," even accusing him of genocide, he decided to look
dispassionately
at the controversy. Farmer concluded, quite sensibly, that Mbeki's message
was that
"poverty and social inequality serve as HIV's most potent co-factors, and any
effort to
address this disease in Africa must embrace a broader conception of disease
causation."
Farmer acknowledged, "this is precisely the point many of us have tried to
makeŠ.and
we haven't been branded as AIDS heretics."
6. Faulty Science: HIV Antibody Tests and Disease
A reappraisal of AIDS in Africa must recognize that HIV tests are
notoriously unreliable among African populations where antibodies against
conventional microbes cross-react to produce unacceptably high false results.
For instance, a 1994 study in central Africa reported that the microbes
responsible for tuberculosis and leprosy were so prevalent that over 70% of
the HIV-positive test results were false. The study also showed that HIV
antibody tests register positive in HIV-free people whose immune systems are
compromised for a variety of reasons, including chronic parasitic infections
and anemia brought on by malaria that are widespread in populations with the
diseases of poverty.
By definition, all viruses that cause a disease infect over 30% of the cells
they target, are present in the blood at concentrations in excess of 10,000
per milliliter, and are contagious. HIV is such a weak retrovirus that, when
detected at all, it is present in such low concentrations (about one per
milliliter) that only its antibodies can be detected. This explains why it is
barely transmissible, requiring an average 1000 unprotected vaginal sex
contacts with an antibody-positive person for someone to "acquire" HIV.
HIV tests (the ELISA and Western Blot) do not detect any virus itself but
rather viral antibodies that are read with an assortment of proteins that are
not even unique to HIV. One review of the medical literature identified nearly
70 different medical and disease conditions that were documented as capable of
triggering a positive result with the test. The tests detect antiviral
immunity which is a prognosis against, not for HIV. The tests fail three
basic criteria: they are not specific, there is no standard interpretation of
the results, and the results are not reproducible.
In a study that explained why there is no correlation between a positive HIV
antibody test result and the isolation of HIV itself, the authors concluded
that "the use of HIV antibody tests as predictive, diagnostic and
epidemiological tools for HIV infection needs to be carefully reappraised."
Another investigation reported that even if HIV-1 is detected in the blood or
cervical secretions of an HIV-positive woman, "the amount of HIV-1 excreted in
the cervicovaginal fluid is independent of the quantity of virus present in
the blood cells or plasma." Richard Strohman, Professor Emeritus of
Molecular Biology at University of California (Berkeley), points out:
"HIV science has always been based not on detection of real infectious units
(real virus) growing under some reasonable standard condition in living cells
in the lab. Rather it is based upon a high tech series of assays constructed
so that disappearingly small quantities of the virus, or some part of the
virus, or some trace (aura) of viral presence may be measured. We have
substituted the measurement for the real thing, like substituting the menu for
the meal."
The association of HIV antibody tests with ordinary infections does not mean
that a positive result warrants a prognosis of death, an effect that would
defy all classical experience with viruses, microbes and antibodies.
Antibodies are proteins made by the immune system that react against
microbes. The presence of antibodies is a near-perfect predictor of
protection against a virus or microbe. It is unprecedented that antibodies
would be predictive of a disease to come. Yet with HIV antibodies, the
patient has never had one of the diseases which is said to occur after its
detection.
According to Dr. Valendar Turner of Royal Perth Hospital (Western Australia),
the ELISA and Western Blot tests indicate that "some antibodies in
patients react with some proteins in the culture of tissues from the
same patients" but with "the total absence of proof of their specificity."
In other words, the tests detect proteins that are alleged to form the
components of such an antibody but have never been shown to be unique to a
virus. The packet insert in an HIV/ELISA test from Abbott Laboratories
contains this prudent disclaimer: "At present there is no recognized standard
for establishing the presence or absence of antibodies to HIV-1 in human
blood." Yet the cornerstone surveillance study for HIV seroprevalence in
South Africa rests on administering a single ELISA test to pregnant Africans
attending antenatal clinics, never acknowledging that the ELISA is notoriously
unreliable in these circumstances since pregnancy is one of 70 conditions
known to trigger a "false positive" result.
Consider an investigation, reported in The Lancet, of 9,389 Ugandans
with HIV antibody test results. Two years after enrolling in the study, 3%
had died, 13% had left the area, and 84% remained. There had been 198 deaths
among the seronegative people and 89 deaths in the seropositive ones. Medical
assessments made prior to death were available for 64 of the HIV-positive
adults. Of these, five (8%) had AIDS as defined by the WHO clinical case
symptoms. The self-proclaimed "largest prospective study of its kind in
sub-Saharan Africa" tested nearly 9400 people in Uganda, the former epicenter
of AIDS in Africa. Yet of the 64 deaths recorded among those who tested
positive for HIV antibodies, only five were diagnosed as AIDS-induced.
Dr. Turner explains that, according to the CDC, an African "with an AIDS
defining diagnosis is counted as heterosexual AIDS simply by the fact that he
or she comes from a country where heterosexual AIDS is claimed to be the
'predominant' mode of transmission. Knowledge of actual sexual contact is not
a requirement." In a 1995 report on the Mwanza region of Tanzania, the
absence of such knowledge allowed the researchers to claim that "improved STD
treatment reduced HIV incidence by about 40%...[in] the first randomized trial
to demonstrate an impact of a preventive intervention on HIV incidence in a
general population." This occurred even though "no change in reported sexual
behavior was observed in either group."
A close review of the data reveals how the 40% reduction was measured. Of the
individuals who initially tested HIV antibody-negative, in the intervention
group 48 out of 4149 (1.2%) were HIV-positive two years later. In the
comparison group, 82 of 4400 (1.9%) tested HIV-positive. The researchers
arrived at the 40% reduction figure simply by calculating the difference
between 1.2% and 1.9%.
The Africans in this study tested positive or negative for antibodies to HIV
but the source of their infection was unknown. While the research suggested
that a regimen of antibiotics reduced the prevalence of HIV-antibodies
in patients, the investigators maintained, with no evidence whatsoever, that
their therapeutic intervention somehow reduced its transmission.
The results of a recent clinical trial in a Ugandan population showed that
despite a reduction in sexual transmitted diseases, there was no difference in
HIV-antibody incidence between the treated and untreated populations or in
pregnant women. Among the 15,127 participants in the study in Rakai District,
Uganda, the "incidence rates of HIV-1 did not differ between intervention and
control subgroups based on age, sex or marital status, among partners in HIV-1
discordant or HIV-1 concordant relationships, or among individuals reporting
single or multiple partners..." Moreover, the findings suggested that while
"the mass-treatment strategy [consisting of azithromycin, ciproflaxacin and
metronidazole] significantly decreased the rate of maternal cervical and
vaginal infections during pregnancy, [there was] no concomitant reduction in
incidence of HIV-1 infection either during pregnancy or after delivery."
AIDS researchers in Africa assume there is a correlation between clinical
symptoms (weight loss, chronic diarrhea, fever, a persistent dry cough) and
sexual activity. Correlation - whether one phenomenon is found in tandem with
another - is not causation. Proof of causation requires that we control all
variables in order to isolate one variable as a cause, not merely as an
associated factor. The clinical symptoms that define an AIDS case in Africa
are expressed in roughly equal numbers among men and women, not because of
alleged heterosexual transmission, but because the socio-economic conditions
that give rise to the gender equity in the distribution of these widespread
symptoms are caused by environmental risk factors to which many Africans are
regularly exposed.
Moreover, there may be a correlation between having those clinical symptoms,
which attest
to an absence of good health, and the likelihood that the patient will
generate a positive
antibody test result. This does not prove that it was the antibodies (or
"HIV") which
caused those symptoms. Anyone who has those symptoms, which are due to
environmental
insults, may cause a positive test result, indicating simply that the patient
is likely to be in
poor health.
To put it another way, the presentation of the clinical AIDS symptoms is
likely to predict
a positive HIV-antibody result on a single ELISA test. Thus, these AIDS
symptoms could
be said to "cause" a positive test result.
Poverty-stricken, malnourished subsistence farmers with malaria, tuberculosis
or repeated attacks of dysentery are likely to have a considerable amount of
cross-reacting antibodies in their systems. Dr. F.J.C. Millard, a physician
at a small mission hospital in South Africa's North Province (formerly
Northern Transvaal), described the local conditions in which the incidence of
tuberculosis and AIDS were rising: "the area had suffered from neglect during
the apartheid years. There is poverty, malnutrition, violence,
unemployment, overpopulation, and, most important of all, a lack of
education."
Statistics on AIDS cases in Africa remain marred by the careless use of
sources, questionable mathematics and a refusal by those who accept that data
to engage in discussions with their critics. Throughout the July 2000
sessions of President Mbeki's AIDS Advisory Panel, purported AIDS cases in
South Africa were routinely conflated with the results from a single ELISA
HIV-antibody test derived from sentinel surveys performed on 18,000 pregnant
(mostly African) women at antenatal clinics. This sleight-of-hand led
adherents to the orthodox view on HIV/AIDS to accept "high counters" whose
uncritical treatment of sources dismissed any attempt at verification and
validation.
For instance, any comparative statistical analysis that is designed to show
which illnesses now afflict South Africans and which ones formerly were the
causes of death must be acutely sensitive to how the definition
of what constituted "South Africa" dramatically changed between 1989 and 1999.
In 1989, South Africa was said, according to the official terminology, to have
a total population of about 21 million. But this figure consciously excluded
the 6.1 million Africans who lived in the so-called TBVC states (Transkei,
Bophuthatswana, Venda and Ciskei), which comprised 100,000 square kilometers.
Furthermore, "South Africa" as defined in 1989 excluded another 8.2 million
people who lived in the six "self-governing territories" (SGTs) that comprised
a further 67,000 square kilometers.
The overwhelming majority of these 14.3 million Africans living in those
fragmented territories were the most obvious victims of the white supremacist
policy of apartheid. The huge rural slums of the TBVC countries were
"urban" with respect to population density but were "rural" with regard to the
absence of proper infrastructure or services, especially in terms of public
health.
The 1989 study by Francis Wilson and Mamphela Ramphele, Uprooting Poverty:
The South African Challenge analyzed the depths of poverty which they
showed were caused by "insufficient labour, insufficient capital and the high
risk of much toil yielding little fruit." In many cases, they explained that
"people are too poor to farm; they cannot afford protective fencing or even to
buy seed and fertilizer. Tractors may be too expensive to hire and oxen to
weak to plough."
The statistical reporting for any aspect of health, employment and living
conditions among those 14.3 million Africans may have been fragmented and
systematically evasive. But no one disputed that mortality and morbidity rates
were significantly higher in the TBVC countries and the SGTs than in the rest
of "South Africa." People in those areas suffered from far higher rates of
protein anemia, malaria, tuberculosis, cholera and dysentery and that life
expectancy was significantly lower there than in the rest of "South Africa,"
as defined in 1989.
Imagine what happened when vital statistics on those 14.3 million people (who
probably now number at least 17 million) were added for inclusion in post-apartheid,
unitary South Africa? Today, the impoverished inhabitants of those former
rural slums are citizens of a single South Africa. Their addition to public
health statistics reveals a great deal about the unhealthy living conditions
that had long prevailed in the TBVC and SGT areas under the apartheid
regime, not the transmissibility of a mutant retrovirus from the Congolese
rainforest.
Many places in KwaZulu-Natal that corresponded to the former Bantustans or the
Self-Governing Territory of KwaZulu were rural slums and cesspools of poverty,
ignorance and disease in the pre-1991 period. Researchers who claim otherwise
should
provide mortality and morbidity statistics for KwaZulu, Transkei, Ciskei, and
Venda
for 1980 and 1985 to assure independent verification.
Even after the dismantling of the apartheid system, AIDS cases
continued to afflict
black South Africans. As a 1998 report for the American Association for the
Advancement of Science and Physicians for Human Rights explained, "the
epidemiology of the HIV/AIDS epidemicŠ.. demonstrates the link between
poverty, low status, and vulnerability to infection." It also concluded that
the
"rigid segregation of health facilities; grossly disproportionate spending on
the health of whites as compared to blacks, resulting in world-class medical
care for whites, while blacks were usually relegated to overcrowded and filthy
facilities; public health policies that ignored disease primarily afflicting
black
people; and the denial of basic sanitation, clean water supply, and other
components of public health to homelands and townships."
At one session of Mbeki's AIDS Advisory Panel, held just days before the 2000
International AIDS Conference in Durban, Dr. William Malegaporu Makgoba of the
South African Medical Research Council showed a slide that compared a large
spike in registered deaths in South Africa in 1999 with those of 1990.
Designed to "show" the devastating effect of the AIDS epidemic on the
country's mortality rate and based on statistics from the Department of Home
Affairs, it made no mention of the statistical discrepancy cited above.
Even more astonishing, nonetheless, was the fact that the graph indicated the
grand total of deaths by age and gender in South Africa for 1999 was 337,000.
In a country of 42 million, that meant that the death rate for post-apartheid
South Africa was 8/10 of 1%, exactly the death rate for the
United States! When we queried Makgoba about this startling "good" news, he
stared at us blankly, then walked away in silence.
If it is not the sexual transmission of HIV, then what causes the widespread
appearance of AIDS symptoms throughout Africa? The evidence strongly
implicates that ordinary, widespread socio-economic conditions give rise to
AIDS symptoms even among HIV-negative Africans. A literature review in the
World Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology pinpointed the
methodological flaw in the belief that AIDS is sexually transmissible:
"Since AIDS is a panoply of diseases or symptoms and signs, the minimum
requirement to prove that AIDS is spread by sexual activity is to take an
index case, isolate the putative agent, trace the sexual contacts of that
case, and then isolate the same agent. To date, no data anywhere of this type
has ever been presented either in Africa, or anywhere else.
In the whole history of medicine there has never been an example of a sexually
transmitted disease, which is spread unidirectionally, and certainly not one
that is spread unidirectionally in one country and bidirectionally in another.
Indeed, given this and the other differences between AIDS in the West and
Africa, it is necessary to postulate that HIV must possess unique
features...[and] be able to distinguish the gender and country of residence of
its host. The only other alternative is to agree with African physicians that
positive HIV antibody tests in Africa do not mean infection with HIV and that
immunosuppression and certain symptoms and diseases which constitute African
AIDS have existed in Africa since time immemorial."
Nor is there any evidence of widespread secondary or tertiary transmission of
HIV or AIDS among heterosexuals in the West. "This is an important point to
consider," warns AIDS researcher Michelle Cochrane, "because the foundation of
orthodox AIDS science and epidemiology rests upon the premise that HIV/AIDS is
relatively frequently transmitted from an index AIDS case (the primary
individual) to a secondary AIDS case either through an exchange of semen or
blood. In turn, this secondarily 'infected' individual must be capable of
transmitting HIV/AIDS to a third individual (tertiary transmission) by the
same means, or an infectious disease epidemic cannot be sustained."
Cochrane juxtaposed the central tenets of orthodox AIDS research against San
Francisco AIDS patients' charts. She found that health officials
over-estimated the risk of contracting HIV through sexual activity, "while
simultaneously under-estimating the proportion of the HIV/AIDS caseload that
were attributable to intravenous drug use and/or socio-economic factors which
condition access to healthcare and prevention services."
Cochrane explains how the bureaucracy for AIDS surveillance in San Francisco
plays a key role in constructing a global consensus on AIDS historiography and
science. This knowledge displays a remarkable coherence and internal
consistency that is used to refute any criticism of its assumptions about the
etiology, epidemiology and history of AIDS.
The AIDS Seroepidemiology and Surveillance Branch in San Francisco constitutes
the world's greatest repository for primary documentation on AIDS. It
includes the medical charts and case files for every one of the 26,171 AIDS
patients cumulatively reported since 1981 in the city. Cochrane demonstrates
how the vested interests of research institutions, AIDS organizations and
activist groups perpetuated the conventional consensus that HIV causes AIDS,
"a conclusion which persists despite the presence of multiple lacunae or
anomalies that the theory has not resolved."
Cochrane showed that health officials conspicuously failed to investigate all
risk factors for immunological dysfunction among heterosexual adult females.
In their surveillance studies, it was sufficient for such a woman
"merely to claim that the source of her infection was sex with an IV drug user
or another man at risk for HIV/AIDS...A percentage of the 187 [heterosexual]
female AIDS cases [out of 25,221 cumulative cases in San Francisco] attributed
to sexual transmission would, with proper investigation, be attributable to IV
drug use. Epidemiological research in the United States and Europe has never
proven that a female has sexually transmitted HIV to a man. [Because]
heterosexual transmission of HIV from a male to a female happens with
difficulty and very infrequently...all AIDS surveillance statistics on female
AIDS cases have been gathered without rigorous scrutiny of the woman's risk
for disease and with a bias towards including as many women as possible."
The a priori assumptions that directed AIDS surveillance activities in
the United States sustained predictions about an exponential spread of the
disease despite the lack of empirical data. This may have reflected an
unholy alliance between epidemiology, professional journals and the media.
Harvard epidemiologist Alex Walker acknowledges that it only takes a handful
of papers before a suspected association "springs into the general public
consciousness in a way that does not happen in any other field of scientific
endeavor." According to a researcher from the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences, "investigators who find an effect get support,
and investigators who don't find an effect don't get support. When times are
tough it becomes extremely difficult for researchers to be objective."
These are points to consider when reviewing the epidemiological data on AIDS
cases or HIV seroprevalence anywhere in Africa. A study on Uganda alleged
that "a reduction in births to HIV-infected mothers will affect demographic
projections of the future numbers of AIDS orphans, as well as projections of
the impact of HIV-1 on population growth." In 1987, the WHO estimated that 1
million Ugandans were HIV antibody-positive. Twelve years later, that number
was unchanged yet the cumulative total of AIDS cases reported in Uganda since
1982 was 54,712. Researchers did not know the health status of the other
945,000 HIV-positive Ugandans who were not AIDS cases nor noticed the
erroneous projections and discrepancies among articles published in the same
journal.
7. AIDS and the Medicalization of Poverty
During the past twenty-two years, as the external financing of
HIV-based AIDS programs in Africa dramatically increased, money for studying
other health sectors remained static, even though deaths from malaria,
tuberculosis, neo-natal tetanus, respiratory diseases and diarrhea grew at
alarming rates.
While western health leaders fixate on HIV, approximately 52% of sub-Saharan
Africans lack access to safe water, 62% have no proper sanitation, almost half
live on less than one dollar a day, and an estimated 50 million pre-school
children suffer from protein malnutrition. Poor harvests, rural poverty,
migratory labor systems, urban crowding, ecological degradation, the collapse
of state structures, and the sadistic violence of civil wars are the primary
threats to African lives. When essential services for water, power, and
transport break down, public sanitation deteriorates and the risks of cholera,
tuberculosis, dysentery, and respiratory infection increase.
Historian Randall Packard documented attempts made by the South African
government to control the spread of tuberculosis and to lower its morbidity
and mortality rates. Even though tuberculosis is curable and the available
control measures are sufficient to combat it effectively with antitubercular
drugs, the apartheid government made little impact on the overall
prevalence of the disease. Packard showed that the South African government
refused "to address the foundations of black poverty, malnutrition, and
disease upon which the current [1980s] epidemic of tuberculosis is
based...[and] placed their faith in the ability of medical science to solve
health problems in the face of adverse social and economic conditions."
AIDS researchers and policy makers confuse correlation with causation as they
conflate tuberculosis incidence and the reactivation of dormant TB with a
person's HIV-antibody status. This co-mingling enables conventional AIDS
programs to link efforts to reduce the infectiousness and severity of
tuberculosis with family planning, safe sex messages and behavior modification
proposals.
In August 1998, the New York Times reported that Zimbabwe had become
the center of the world's AIDS epidemic. It claimed that as many as 25
percent of all adult Zimbabweans were infected with HIV, the highest infection
rate on earth. Although it provided no figures for previous years, the
article acknowledged that the presumed increase in HIV incidence had occurred
when increasing poverty, food shortages and instability had "begun to overcome
the country. Tuberculosis, hepatitis, malaria, measles and cholera...have
surged mercilessly. So have infant mortality, stillbirths and sexually
transmitted diseases." Malarial deaths had risen from 100 in 1989 to 2,800 in
1997 and tuberculosis cases jumped from 5,000 in 1986 to 35,000 in 1997. The
reporter admitted that all of these diseases indicated deepening social
deprivation, with tuberculosis as "the sentinel illness of poverty and social
decline."
Subsequent reports showed that rural suffering in Zimbabwe was caused by
government corruption, a savage drought and the breakdown of civil society
under the harsh regime of Robert Mugabe. Zimbabwean misery over the past
fifteen years was also the result of local mismanagement and gross inequities
in the region that were accelerated by strictures imposed by the World Bank's
structural adjustment programs. In such dire straits, people were hurting
because of food shortages and untreated illnesses, not because of sexual
promiscuity. Once again, it was surely no accident that the clinical symptoms
that would define a case of AIDS in Zimbabwe (fever, diarrhea, weight loss,
and persistent cough) were actually manifestations of protein anemia,
unsanitary drinking water and parasitic infections in a country "with one of
the fastest-shrinking economies on earth."
Other articles in the macabre series, entitled "Dead Zones," illustrated
fundamental flaws in the HIV/AIDS model. Among sick or dying Africans,
clinicians cannot distinguish which patients would test antibody-positive even
if test kits were available. People were presumptively diagnosed as "having
AIDS" simply by having the clinical conditions that HIV is said to cause,
such as tuberculosis or the symptoms of malaria (persistent night sweats,
fever, wasting) or that of cholera (diarrhea, fever, wasting).
Former WHO Director General Hiroshi Nakajima warned emphatically that "poverty
is the world's deadliest disease." Indeed, the leading causes of
immunodeficiency and the best predictors for clinical AIDS symptoms in Africa
are impoverished living conditions, economic deprivation and protein anemia,
not extraordinary sexual behavior or the trace measurements of
antibodies for a retrovirus that has proved difficult to isolate directly.
The AIDS epidemic in Africa has been used to justify the medicalization of
sub-Saharan poverty. Rather than treat the clinical symptoms of AIDS as the
manifestations of impoverished living conditions, researchers like Dr. David
Alnwick, UNICEF's health chief, invert this cause-and-effect relationship to
allege that "all our efforts at providing safe water and other protections for
children have been undermined, undone, by the AIDS epidemic."
Western medical intervention has taken the form of vaccine trials, drug
testing and demands for behavior modification. In 1997, the Division of AIDS
at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases concluded that
there was "not enough evidence that a live attenuated HIV-1 vaccine [was] safe
- or effective." Nonetheless, the International Association of Physicians in
AIDS Care (IAPAC) insisted that a vaccine should not be required to meet U.S.
safety and efficacy standards because the alleged number of AIDS cases
rendered "further delay unethical."
AIDS scientists and public health planners should recognize the roles of
malnutrition, poor sanitation, and parasitic and endemic infections in
producing the clinical AIDS symptoms that are manifestations of non-HIV
insults. The data strongly suggest that socio-economic development, not
sexual restraint, is the key to improving the health of Africans. Wherever
one projects high rates of HIV-antibodies in Africans, one also finds high
rates for all germs indicative of sanitation problems which generally indicate
abject poverty, destitution and a high disease burden.
Phillipe and Evelyn Krynen, medically trained charity workers employed by the
French group Partage in Kagera Province (Tanzania), report that when
"appropriate treatment was given to villagers who became ill with complaints
such as pneumonia and fungal infections that might have contributed to an AIDS
diagnosis, they usually recovered." Father Angelo D'Agostino, a former
surgeon who founded Nyumbani, a hospice for abandoned and orphaned
HIV-positive children in Kenya came to a similar conclusion:
"People think a positive test means no hope, so the children are relegated to
the back wards of hospitals which have no resources and they die. They are
very sick when they come to us. Usually they are depressed, withdrawn, and
silent....But as a result of their care here, they put on weight, recover from
their infections, and thrive. Hygiene is excellent [and] nutrition is very
good; they get vitamin supplements, cod liver oil, greens every day, plenty of
protein. They are really flourishing."
Finally, a 1998 study of pregnant, HIV antibody-positive women in Tanzania
showed that simply providing them with inexpensive micronutrient supplements
produced beneficial effects and decreased adverse pregnancy outcomes. The
researchers found that women who received prenatal multivitamins had heavier
placentas, gave birth to healthier babies and showed a noticeable "improvement
in fetal nutritional status, enhancement of fetal immunity, and decreased risk
of infections." Their commitment to the belief that AIDS was caused by a
viral infection obliged the researchers to conclude that "how the individual
vitamins produce these effects is not fully understood."
Once scholars consider the non-contagious, indigenous-disease explanations for
what are called AIDS, they may see things differently. The problem is that
dysentery and malaria do not yield headlines or fatten public-health budgets.
"Plagues" and infectious diseases do.
8. Conclusion
Inadequate libraries, poorly paved roads, a dearth of teachers,
insufficient childhood immunizations, poor harvests, an excess of rinderpest
or locusts, domestic abuse, awful public transportation systems, disruptive
regime transitions, unwanted sexual advances......... you name it and HIV/AIDS
is somehow, ultimately behind it.
Given the erratic and unreliable keeping of vital statistics across Africa
(amply
documented in the Global Burden of Disease Study), and the vague
symptomology that
constitutes an "AIDS" case to begin with, it sometimes seems that unless an
African was
killed by gunshot wounds or had died from injuries sustained in a traffic
accident, then
almost any decedent can safely be alleged, without any death certificate or an
autopsy, to
have died from "AIDS" or an "AIDS-related illness."
A recent report, Downward Spiral: HIV/AIDS, State Capacity, and Political
Conflict in Zimbabwe exemplifies the all-inclusive nature of the HIV/AIDS
hypothesis. One is astonished to learn about the diversity of economic
maladies in Zimbabwe that the authors claim are either directly caused or
indirectly induced by the HIV/AIDS epidemic and HIV disease, which they call
"debilitation and mortality as the virus increasingly colonizes the work
force." These include:
1) reduction of the labor supply
2) declining productivity of workers
3) decline in remittance income
4) current food shortage
5) decline in life expectancy
6) increased infant mortality
7) decline in personal savings
8) increased national debt
9) increased orphans
10) criminal behavior and general disenchantment
11) opportunities for terrorists
12) accentuated social class differences
13) reduction in the accumulation of knowledge and skills
14) increased violence against women
15) government collapse
People can be encouraged to behave thoughtfully in their sexual lives if they
are provided with reliable information about condom use, contraception, family
planning and venereal diseases. Rather than spend billions of dollars on
behavior modification schemes or in pursuit of an illusory AIDS vaccine,
multilateral aid should be earmarked to subsidize inexpensive but effective
medicines to treat the specific symptoms of common illnesses that are a
byproduct of impoverished living conditions.
That money can purchase antibiotics to treat syphilis or gonorrhea,
rehydration tablets for diarrhea, directly observed therapy (DOTS) with
anti-microbial medicine for tuberculosis sufferers, and micronutrients and
vitamin supplements for pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers, regardless
of their alleged HIV status. These measures may not be sexy, but they will
save lives.
Over the past century, infectious diseases have been controlled through such
strikingly
successful measures as improved sanitation, cleaner drinking water,
eradication of mosquitoes, isolation of genuinely contagious individuals,
vaccinations, and the prudent use of antibiotics. Nowadays throughout the AIDS
community, the enemies of public health are said to come
from within individuals themselves, especially those with manifestly
inappropriate sexual
behaviors.
Multilateral institutions and African scientists should familiarize themselves
with the thoughtful body of literature that demonstrates the contradictions,
anomalies and inconsistencies in the orthodox view that the symptoms of AIDS
are caused by a single viral infection. Once they consider the
non-contagious explanations for AIDS cases in Africa, they can help stop the
proliferation of terrifying misinformation that associates sexuality with
death.
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