Patient Zero and the Making of the AIDS Epidemic
Page 4
edgment that someone like him— who has undertaken extensive research, who has seen
some of his interviewees subsequently retract their recorded testimony, and whose oppo-
nents have misrepresented and then ignored his points— might have genuine concerns that
he was witnessing something resembling a cover- up.
33. For example, Hilary Koprowski, “Hypotheses and Facts,” Philosophical Transac-
tions of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences 356, no. 1410 (2001): 832; Stan-
ley A. Plotkin, “Chimpanzees and Journalists,” Vaccine 22 (2004): 1829– 30. Hooper’s re-
buttal to this allegation can be read on his website: “The Allegation That The River Has
Damaged Modern Attempts to Eradicate Polio,” AIDS Origins (blog), October 15, 2004,
http:// www .aidsorigins .com/ allegation - river - has - damaged - modern - attempts - eradicate
- polio.
Introduction 13
panzee to a single human.34 Others have investigated the sociopolitical
and environmental conditions in early twentieth-
century Africa that
may have contributed to the early expansion of HIV.35
The Origins of AIDS (2011)—a substantial contribution to the dis-
cussion from Jacques Pepin, a microbiologist and infectious disease spe-
cialist—offers a detailed contextualization of the colonial environment
of central Africa in the fi rst half of the twentieth century and argues
for the plausibility of the “cut hunter” theory. Pepin presents compel-
ling evidence for a previously little- known outbreak of disease sugges-
tive of AIDS in a railway camp in French Equatorial Africa in the 1920s
and early 1930s. Building on computer estimations that have dated the
crossover event to the fi rst decades of the twentieth century, he takes
“1921” as a date for argument’s sake. Around this time, he proposes, an
unknown individual— “the true ‘patient zero,’” he writes— came in con-
tact with the blood of a chimpanzee infected with a simian immunodefi -
ciency virus; Pepin suggests that sixty million people in the world today
can trace their infections from this individual.36 Pepin also provides use-
ful historical evidence to demonstrate the close trade and employment
ties linking the colonial territories of French Equatorial Africa and the
Belgian Congo near the towns of Brazzaville and Léopoldville. Here, an
34. Michael Worobey et al., “Direct Evidence of Extensive Diversity of HIV- 1 in Kin-
shasa by 1960,” Nature 455, no. 2 (2008): 661– 64. By holding as a constant the rate at which
a virus mutates, they argue that this “relaxed molecular clock” method allows researchers
to estimate backward to the time of the initial crossover event, to a virus from which all
subsidiary strains began mutating away. Critics of this approach, of which Hooper is again
one of the most vocal, contend that such a method cannot work with a virus like HIV.
The virus evolves four to ten times as much through recombination— when an individual
is infected with two or more strains of HIV and the viruses swap genetic information with
each other— as it does through mutation. The relaxed molecular clock method, these crit-
ics contend, cannot control for this recombination. See Hooper, “Michael Worobey’s Wob-
bly Research into the Early History of HIV,” AIDS Origins (blog), March 19, 2008, http://
www .aidsorigins .com/ michael - worobey - wobbly - research - early - history - hiv; Simon Wain-
Hobson et al., “Network Analysis of Human and Simian Immunodefi ciency Virus Se-
quence Sets Reveals Massive Recombination Resulting in Shorter Pathways,” Journal of
General Virology 84, no. 4 (2003): 885– 95.
35. For example, Tamara Giles- Vernick et al., “Social History, Biology, and the Emer-
gence of HIV in Colonial Africa,” Journal of African History 54 (2013): 11– 30.
36. Jacques Pepin, The Origins of AIDS (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2011), 1– 58, “patient zero” quotation at 40.
14
chapter 0
unknowingly infected individual could have brought HIV from one co-
lonial region to another relatively easily on a one- hour boat ride. He also
contends that iatrogenic infections— unintentional HIV transmission by
doctors re using unsterilized needles— are likely to have played a signifi -
cant role in the rise of HIV in Africa in the early to mid- twentieth cen-
tury (though not in the present day).37
Pepin draws on recent studies to conclude that the virus traveled from
central Africa to Haiti during the 1960s, in the body of one among sev-
eral thousand Haitian workers who were recruited to work in Zaire dur-
ing that decade and who later returned to their home country.38 He sug-
gests the possibility that high- volume blood plasma collection in Haiti
provided an effi cient means of transmitting the newly introduced virus
to many Haitians. From there, through the transnational blood indus-
try and sexual liaisons between American homosexual travelers and in-
fected Haitian men, the same subtype of HIV made its way from Haiti
into North America by the early 1970s. There it spread silently through
populations of injecting drug users, men who had sex with other men,
and the recipients of blood products, before coming to the attention of
investigators when these infected individuals fell sick up to ten years
later.39 From the vantage point of 2011, Pepin is able to place “the case
of the Air Canada fl ight attendant, the so- called ‘patient zero,’” at the
very end of his account. He serves as a highly visible fi gure, emblem-
atic of the disease’s amplifi cation and rapid spread in the 1970s through
North America’s gay communities, but not a unique player in this over-
all global diffusion.40 North American readers did not share the benefi t
of this synthesis in 1987, when newspapers reported the identifi cation of
a Canadian fl ight attendant as “Patient Zero” for an epidemic thought
then to have begun in the late 1970s. “Patient Zero” would therefore, by
virtue of his transatlantic travels, offer the simple solution to Americans
asking the question, “How did AIDS arrive here?”41
37. Ibid., 3– 4.
38. Ibid., 187– 90.
39. Ibid., 231– 33.
40. Ibid., 234.
41. Embellishing Randy Shilts’s account, media accounts hypothesized that the fl ight
attendant had been infected with the virus during sexual encounters with “Africans” in
Europe; see, for example, “Canadian Said to Have Had Key Role in Spread of AIDS,”
New York Times, October 7, 1987, B7.
Introduction 15
HIV/AIDS Histories
Following a few questions and an announcement apologizing for the
need to reschedule a talk by the NCI scientist Robert Gallo, Curran
took the microphone. He began his presentation with the ominous note
that “we are in the fi rst couple years of the recognition of a disease that’s
going to probably be with us forever. You will hear a lot about this over
the next decade or so I think.”42
* * *
The bulk of this book is concerned with the early North American
AIDS epidemic, roughly between 1981 and 1996
.43 The beginning of this
period is marked by the fi rst organized recognition of the emergence of
a possibly new disease and the growing awareness of the problem’s scale
and severity. The numbers of dying patients intensifi ed year by year dur-
ing this time— dozens, hundreds, and eventually thousands— against an
initial backdrop of governmental silence, widespread homophobia, and
apparent apathy. To fi ll this void, a remarkable patchwork of community-
based voluntary service organizations sprang up in lesbian and gay com-
munities across North America to respond to the needs of the sick and
dying.44 Mounting anger among these communities gave rise, from 1987
onward, to direct action groups such as the AIDS Coalition to Unleash
Power (ACT UP). These activists succeeded in challenging the view
that AIDS was universally fatal and in changing the contours of treat-
ment access.45 The health circumstances of most people with AIDS did
42. “NCAB Meeting,” 15– 16.
43. Drawing upon UNAIDS categorizations, this book defi nes North America as Can-
ada and the United States. Within this offi cial categorization system, Mexico is grouped
with Latin America, a separation which is obviously arbitrary. As will be demonstrated in
chapter 2, there is a long history of cross border fl ow of sexually transmitted diseases be-
tween Mexico and the United States. Indeed, political borders have never halted the move-
ment of populations and diseases.
44. When compared with later decades, individuals who identifi ed as bisexual and
as transgender or transsexual were less frequently highlighted as distinctive community
members during this period. In a bid to strike a balance between historically sensitive ter-
minology and recognition of these often more marginalized individuals, in this book I will
refer to both “lesbian and gay communities” and “LGBT individuals.”
45. Deborah B. Gould, Moving Politics: Emotion and ACT UP’s Fight against AIDS
16
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not substantially improve, however, until the development of treatment
regimens that made use of several antiretroviral drugs simultaneously.
This advance, known as combination therapy or highly active antiretro-
viral therapy (HAART), was publicly heralded at the 1996 International
AIDS Conference in Vancouver. From this point on, the character of
the epidemic, in resource- rich countries at least, changed irrevocably.
With HAART, many patients who had previously been near death expe-
rienced the “Lazarus effect,” restored to nearly full health like the bibli-
cal character said to have been resurrected through a miracle of Jesus.46
This is not to suggest that this breakthrough, brought about through the
work of patient activism and scientifi c research, was a panacea. Side ef-
fects from antiretrovirals, divisions in the highly affected gay commu-
nities between HIV- positive and - negative individuals, and shifts in ac-
tivism toward gay marriage and away from community involvement in
health have all left many survivors doubting the “miracle” of their ex-
tended lives.47 The point to be made, rather, is that the pre- HAART era
of the epidemic was substantially different from the period that followed
in the United States and Canada, and this book’s chronological focus re-
fl ects this difference.48
Within this early period of the epidemic, the three years from the
spring of 1981 to the spring of 1984 are of particular historical interest.
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2009), 55– 175; United in Anger: A History of ACT
UP (New York: United in Anger, 2012), documentary fi lm directed by Jim Hubbard and
produced by Jim Hubbard and Sarah Schulman; the director kindly provided me with a
review copy of this ninety- three- minute fi lm via online streaming prior to its release on
DVD in 2014.
46. Jason Szabo, “Re- Birthing Pains: Protease Inhibitors, The ‘Lazarus Syndrome,’
and the Transformation of the Acquired Immunodefi ciency Syndrome” (paper presented
at the 82nd annual meeting of the American Association for the History of Medicine,
Cleveland, OH, April 26, 2009); John 11:1.
47. See, for example, George Chauncey, Why Marriage? The History Shaping To-
day’s Debate over Gay Equality (New York: Basic Books, 2004); Rupert Whitaker,
“Thirty Years of AIDS: Triumphs, Failures, and the Unlearned Lessons,” lecture at
King’s College, London, November 3, 2011, podcast, MP3 fi le, 49:10, http:// podcast .ulcc
.ac .uk/ accounts/ kings/ Humanities _and _Health/ 3 _11 _2011 _Rupert _Whitaker _Triumphs
_failures _and _unlearned _lessons .mp3.
48. This periodization is borne out in Ronald Bayer and Gerald M. Oppenheimer,
AIDS Doctors: Voices from the Epidemic: An Oral History (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2000), 226– 33. More recently, one of the physicians interviewed by Bayer and Op-
penheimer referred to the pre- 1996 years as “the hysterical old days of AIDS”: Abigail
Zuger, “With AIDS, Time to Get beyond Blame,” New York Times, April 19, 2010, D6.
Introduction 17
They span the time separating the earliest concerted efforts by physi-
cians and epidemiologists to identify and investigate the problem, and
they include the widely reported discovery of a virus by a team of NIH
scientists led by Gallo.49 While discussions and debates over the cause
of AIDS would smolder on after this time, these disputes were gradu-
ally exiled to the edges of orthodoxy. Before the spring of 1984, there
had been a multitude of theories about how AIDS was caused and much
debate about the consequences for the gay community. After May 1984,
the scientifi c consensus that AIDS was caused by a virus legitimated the
greater involvement of the scientifi c and medical establishment, and it
downplayed the importance of the epidemiological research that had
played an important part in the earliest phase of the epidemic.50 It also
paved the way for a more generalized acceptance— or “blackboxing”— of
the idea that the condition was caused by a single virus, though there
would be continued, limited resistance to this dominant view from a
small minority of dissenters.51
Historians and other observers examined the period from 1981 to
1996 in evolving waves of coverage. Some initially attempted to draw les-
sons from the past— for example, past responses to plague or syphilis in
North America or Western Europe— to interpret the unexpected arrival
of a deadly new epidemic in resource- rich countries in the late twentieth
49. At the time, Gallo’s discovery of the virus drew the most media attention in North
America, notwithstanding the isolation of a virus by a team of French scientists at the Pas-
teur Institute in Paris in 1983. Later, after many years of dispute, the French team would
be widely acknowledged as having priority for the discovery, a view which was bolstered
in 2008 when Françoise Barré- Sinoussi and Luc Montagnier were awarded a Nobel Prize
for their work. In her recent book on three decades of AIDS, Victoria Harden traces to
Shilts’s book what she describes as the “character assassination” of Gallo; see Harden,
/>
AIDS at 30: A History (Dulles, VA: Potomac Books, 2012), 170.
50. Gerald M. Oppenheimer, “In the Eye of the Storm: The Epidemiological Construc-
tion of AIDS,” in Fee and Fox, AIDS: The Burdens of History, 284– 86.
51. Epstein, Impure Science, 26– 31. One thread of dissent, HIV denialism, downplayed
the role of HIV, emphasizing instead the importance of cofactors in individuals who de-
veloped AIDS. From 1987 onward, Peter Duesberg, a biochemist and vocal minority pro-
tester in studies about the etiology of AIDS, would repeatedly challenge the dominant
view that HIV caused AIDS; Epstein, Impure Science, 105– 78. Denialism took a more
political, anti- Western, and ultimately tragic shape when South African president Thabo
Mbeki drew on Duesberg’s ideas to resist the considerable evidence that AIDS was caused
by a virus that could be treated with antiretroviral therapy; Nattrass, AIDS Conspiracy,
77– 104.
18
chapter 0
century.52 Gradually, this “apocalyptic” coverage yielded to a more nor-
malized approach, mirroring a more routinized medical response to
AIDS, which by the early 1990s began to assume the characteristics of a
more chronic condition.53 Some academic historians struggled with the
challenge of writing dispassionately about contemporary events, particu-
larly when their interpretations faced angry resistance from more activ-
ist observers, for whom these events were frequently confl icts with mor-
tal consequences.54
The earliest of the AIDS histories, And the Band Played On, a pow-
erful chronicle written by the San Francisco– based journalist Randy
Shilts, remains one of the most cited accounts of the American expe-
rience and continues to shape historical interpretations of the fi rst
fi ve years of the epidemic. In 2007, a USA Today editors’ choice arti-
cle listed the bestseller, alongside Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History of
Time and Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses, as one of the most in-
fl uential books of the past quarter century.55 The Library of Congress
included the book in its 2012 exhibition entitled “Books that Shaped
America,” seeing it as having “a profound effect on American life.”56 By
the time Shilts died of AIDS in 1994, his book had been translated into