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Patient Zero and the Making of the AIDS Epidemic

Page 7

by Richard A. McKay


  investigation, differences which would hamper communication between

  and among these groups.87 Kushner’s remarks and the laughter Curran’s

  response elicited also express an acute uneasiness about the mobile na-

  ture of the perceived threat and point to a classic public health dilemma:

  How to balance the liberty of a sick individual against the community’s

  presumed right to health?88 The story of “Patient Zero” would engender

  strong views in this debate and raise questions about the role of crimi-

  nal law in resolving this confl ict. It would also test the limits of how far

  and how widely public health offi cials might be expected to share infor-

  mation in the jet age, when individuals with transmissible disease might

  swiftly and easily move between public health jurisdictions.

  Writing a “Patient’s View” History

  “He is a living man with Kaposi’s sarcoma. He is still out there.” With

  these rather ominous words, Curran encapsulated the ambiguity and

  fear surrounding Dugas, the man at the center of the “Patient Zero” nar-

  rative. He was a patient who had not died quickly, who was still at large,

  87. With the words “Holy mackerel,” Richard Mathias— a physician who worked during

  the early 1980s as a consultant epidemiologist for British Columbia’s Ministry of Health—

  later summed up the astonished response he shared with his heterosexual colleagues upon

  learning how many partners this individual had reported. For him their surprise refl ected

  how little they knew at the time about the sexual behaviors of the gay men they were study-

  ing. He also suggested that, in retrospect, researchers’ early hypotheses were too often un-

  derpinned by a desire to establish a notional safe distance between their own behaviors

  and those of the gay men deemed at risk of developing AIDS; Richard Mathias, interview

  with author, Vancouver, August 28, 2007, recording C1491/16, tape 1, sides A and B, Brit-

  ish Library Sound Archive, London (hereafter cited as BLSA); emphasis on recording. All

  such interviews are part of Richard A. McKay, 2007 and 2008, Imagining Patient Zero: In-

  terviews about the History of the North American AIDS Epidemic, © Richard A. McKay

  and The British Library, Reference C1491. A full list of interviewees appears in the ap-

  pendix at the back of this book. All the recordings are archived in the BLSA as part of the

  Oral History collections and can be accessed at the British Library, subject to any access

  restrictions requested by interviewees and the author.

  88. See Judith Walzer Leavitt’s exemplary work on this complex question, explored

  through the life of “Typhoid Mary” Mallon: Typhoid Mary: Captive to the Public’s Health

  (Boston: Beacon Press, 1996).

  Introduction 31

  and whose medical condition was becoming understood to be much

  more dangerous than originally suspected. His case and initial cooper-

  ation with researchers offered suggestive evidence to support an emerg-

  ing consensus that AIDS was caused by a transmissible agent, and yet

  there were not suffi cient data to convince him to change his behavior.

  While Curran would go on to say that this man was simply one of many

  who might be “carriers,” the fact that he had been singled out for men-

  tion, and was “still out there,” undercut this notion.

  At the heart of this book is the experience of a gay man, one of the

  earliest persons identifi ed with AIDS in North America, whose own

  voice has been silenced by particularly successful retellings of his story,

  versions which are “still out there.” This book grounds the evocative

  ideas of origins, carriers, and disease spreading with an account of this

  man’s life and experience. Such an effort draws on a body of work in

  the subfi eld of medical history that emphasizes the importance of con-

  sidering “the patient’s view.” Epitomized by a 1985 article by Roy Por-

  ter that extended the ambitions of 1960s and 1970s social history, this

  trend sought to examine the physician– patient encounter from the pa-

  tient’s perspective and urged historians to overcome the methodological

  challenges posed by the bulk of the records documenting these encoun-

  ters being written by practitioners.89 Porter has been criticized for focus-

  ing too much on the doctor– patient relationship, at the expense of such

  other individuals as nurses, technicians, and carers, who often play roles

  in the medical encounter.90 Bearing this criticism in mind, the book at-

  tempts to draw on a wider variety of sources, including Dugas’s friends,

  colleagues, and health workers, in an attempt to provide a richer social

  depiction of the early AIDS epidemic.

  Guided by the work of queer, transnational, and medical historians,

  Patient Zero blends archival research with oral history methods to artic-

  ulate and analyze previously marginalized historical accounts. It incor-

  porates evidence of a popular story’s transmission and reception beyond

  American borders and actively addresses the challenge of locating the

  patient’s view in a historical record largely constructed by health- care

  89. Roy Porter, “The Patient’s View: Doing Medical History from Below,” Theory and

  Society 14, no. 2 (1985): 175– 98. For an example of patient’s view history for “Typhoid

  Mary” Mallon, see Leavitt, Typhoid Mary, 162– 201.

  90. Flurin Condrau, “The Patient’s View Meets the Clinical Gaze,” Social History of

  Medicine 20, no. 3 (2007): 533– 34.

  32

  chapter 0

  workers. To counterbalance an abundance of accounts from physicians

  and public health workers in the dominant narrative of the early AIDS

  epidemic, I made a concerted effort to interview those identifying them-

  selves as LGBT individuals, people living with HIV/AIDS, and acquain-

  tances and coworkers of Dugas, using a combination of targeted and

  chain- referral sampling. Research in LGBT and queer history has re-

  lied heavily on the use of oral history interviewing, with many practi-

  tioners aiming to address the manner in which these individuals have

  been systematically excluded from large parts of the published record.91

  These reminiscences were supplemented by interviews with key AIDS

  physicians, public health workers, and the commissioner of the public

  inquiry into the Canadian blood system. The book assembles primary

  source material from public and private archives from across the United

  States and Canada. Records of the CDC’s AIDS Task Force were exam-

  ined to chart the evolution and consequences of the Los Angeles cluster

  study that focused on the fl ight attendant. In addition, I analyzed Shilts’s

  personal and professional papers— particularly the interview notes from

  which he built his characterization of Dugas and the extensive press cov-

  erage generated by Band— as well as records from community- based

  AIDS organizations in New York, San Francisco, Toronto, and Vancou-

  ver, and gay periodicals from across North America.92

  The process of recovering, organizing, and presenting these varied

  and far- fl ung sources— laborious and time- consuming in its own right—

  also pres
ented some challenging ethical quandaries for a historian to

  puzzle through, most relating to posthumous confi dentiality. To what ex-

  91. John Howard, Men Like That: A Southern Queer History (London: University

  of Chicago Press, 1999), 12– 13; Nan Alamilla Boyd, ‘Who Is the Subject? Queer Theory

  Meets Oral History,’ Journal of the History of Sexuality 17, no. 2 (2008): 177– 89. This is a

  well- established methodology in the history of medicine as well; see Nancy Tomes, “Oral

  History in the History of Medicine,” Journal of American History 78, no. 2 (1991), 607– 17;

  Paul Thompson and Rob Perks, An Introduction to the Use of Oral History in the History

  of Medicine (London: National Life Story Collection, 1993). Of course, Randy Shilts was

  himself an author whose work was primarily based on oral testimony.

  92. The reporter’s interview notes form part of a large collection of his personal and

  professional papers, bequeathed to the San Francisco Public Library after his death from

  AIDS in 1994. The collection holds drafts for virtually all his writing, including journals,

  early college compositions, reporting for the Advocate and San Francisco Chronicle, and research materials for his three books; Randy Shilts Papers (GLC 43), LGBTQIA Center,

  SFPL (hereafter cited as Shilts Papers). All quotations from Shilts’s unpublished work ap-

  pear with permission given by the Shilts Literary Trust.

  Introduction 33

  tent ought information shared by Dugas on his medical journey be held

  in confi dence after his death? And, on a related note, if journalists be-

  queath their records to public archives, as Shilts and others have done,

  should the confi dence they provided to their sources during their life-

  times extend beyond the grave?

  The second question may be easier to resolve than the fi rst. Report-

  ers’ privilege— the right for journalists to refuse to testify in legal pro-

  ceedings to protect their anonymous sources— exists for a number of rea-

  sons: to maintain the focus of a news organization’s staff and resources

  on news gathering instead of responding to subpoenas; to protect jour-

  nalists’ sources from retribution or embarrassment; and to clearly sep-

  arate a free press from the government.93 Current legislation in the

  United States focuses chiefl y on preventing living journalists from be-

  ing forced to identify their sources during their lifetimes and pays little

  explicit attention to any long- term duties of confi dence.94 This is not to

  suggest that no one has contemplated the problems associated with post-

  humous confi dentiality. In the forceful words of a British journalist and

  media scholar, “Protecting a source is without qualifi cation. It should

  never be given up— not to the editor or proprietor; not even after death.

  Journalists should never identify confi dential sources on any traceable

  record, without the knowledge and permission of their informant.”95 By

  contrast, when an American reporter raised the alarm about federal

  agents hunting for information about decades- old unauthorized disclo-

  sures, his questions balanced concerns about deterring future sources

  with the broader protection of the historical record. Would the agents,

  seeking access to a recently deceased journalist’s fi les before they were

  catalogued for archival use, rob historians of the fullest possible histor-

  ical documentation and deprive the public of their right to learn about

  the historical past?96 These examples may indicate a need for report-

  ers to refl ect carefully on whether they wish to deposit their papers for

  93. Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, The First Amendment Handbook,

  7th ed. (Arlington, VA: Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, 2011), http:// www

  .rcfp .org/ rcfp/ orders/ docs/ FAHB .pdf.

  94. I have drawn this conclusion from a review of material posted on the Reporters

  Committee for Freedom of the Press website, http:// www .rcfp .org.

  95. Tim Crook, “Don’t Attack Gilligan for Doing His Job,” letter to the editor, Guard-

  ian [London], September 9, 2003, https:// www .theguardian .com/ media/ 2003/ sep/ 10/ bbc

  .guardianletters.

  96. Mark Feldstein, “Not after Reporters . . . Just Their Sources,” News Media and

  34

  chapter 0

  posterity. If they proceed, do they have a responsibility to protect the

  identities of their sources and, if so, for how long? With regard to indi-

  viduals named in Shilts’s publicly available records, my own approach

  was a pragmatic one. Since this reporter recorded in his notes whether

  a source wished to be identifi ed or not, it was possible for me to employ

  pseudonyms for these individuals in my own book.

  Returning to the initial question about Dugas’s medical information,

  it is tempting, at fi rst, to respond that it should remain confi dential in its

  entirety. To begin with, this stance accords with current ethical guidance

  promoted in codes of medical and public health ethics: confi dentiality

  is a fundamental value, and patients’ information should remain secret

  even after they die.97 Health professionals work hard every day to pre-

  serve the public’s trust in this confi dentiality when they discuss individ-

  ual cases, removing personal identifi ers and using pseudonyms as a form

  of protective code.

  Yet at the heart of this book is a story of how one such code was bro-

  ken. In many ways the story of Gaétan Dugas as “Patient Zero” is a per-

  fect example of both the dangers of unauthorized disclosure of confi den-

  tial information and the complexity of documenting this history. It also

  draws focus to contradictory tensions at play in the 1980s, between pa-

  tients wishing to preserve their privacy yet facing an increasing political

  imperative to render their private struggles more visible to bring atten-

  tion to a condition that many refused to see. In 1987 Randy Shilts pub-

  licly identifi ed Dugas, four years after the man’s death, relaying infor-

  mation about his having contracted and transmitted STIs and HIV and

  intimating that he was deliberately trying to spread disease. The journal-

  ist did so in part to focus national attention on the epidemic. When these

  stories were widely repeated in subsequent reporting— reaching millions

  of readers and television viewers within weeks— Dugas was explicitly

  blamed for starting a continental epidemic and reached an almost un-

  paralleled posthumous notoriety.

  Dugas’s example points to the challenges of anonymizing unusual

  the Law 30, no. 2 (Summer 2006), http:// www .rcfp .org/ browse - media - law - resources/ news

  - media - law/ news - media - and - law - summer - 2006/ not - after - reporters - just - th.

  97. See, for example, General Medical Council, Confi dentiality, October 12, 2009,

  http:// www .gmc - uk .org/ static/ documents/ content/ Confi dentiality _ - _English _1015 .pdf;

  and Lisa M. Lee and Christina Zarowsky, “Foundational Values for Public Health,” Pub-

  lic Health Reviews 36, no. 2 (2015): 1– 9.

  Introduction 35

  cases. He had a rare, distinctive, and at times visible condition. He trav-

  eled widely, actively participated in numerous co
mmunities, and inter-

  acted with many sexual contacts and health workers. When interviewed

  by CDC researchers, he agreed for his name to be shared with other re-

  searchers as part of their investigations, and his example was much dis-

  cussed among health professionals. Though there is no evidence his

  name was used publicly, personal identifi ers linked to his case were

  shared within suffi ciently small communities of early cases and health

  workers. In essence, the clues were there to be tied together, waiting for

  a reporter to decide that it was in the public interest to name names.

  In addition to affecting forever the reputations of a dead man and his

  surviving family members, Shilts’s actions threw up diffi culties for any

  conscientious historian wishing to understand how this story had devel-

  oped. By revealing “Patient 0” to be Dugas, sensitive information which

  researchers had released publicly in coded terms before 1987 became in-

  stantly linked to him. Internal CDC documents referring to individuals

  by pseudonyms, which might otherwise have been shared relatively se-

  curely to provide additional contextual details about the cluster study,

  now risked further disclosures about a now- identifi able “Patient 0.” Tak-

  ing a hard line on confi dentiality might mean preventing all unpublished

  material that related to this man and the process by which he became

  known as “Patient 0,” even if it was encoded, to remain forever closed to

  historians and the public.

  However, problems with this approach become readily apparent. Is it

  not akin to shutting the barn door after the horses have escaped? If any-

  one questioned, as many did, the way by which this individual took on a

  role of importance in the history, crucial information for understanding

  and critiquing this process would be lost. If his family wondered, as they

  did in 1987, whether his identity had been disclosed through the leak-

  ing of confi dential hospital medical fi les, their questions would remain

  unanswered. Although the offi cial stance of the CDC for years was to

  neither confi rm nor deny the identity of this individual, newspaper in-

  terviews from both individual CDC investigators and Shilts confi rmed

  that the code had been breached.98 Was Dugas now a public fi gure, per-

 

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