Four gay men reflect on Aids the 80s and 90s rponse to TV seri It's A S.
Contents:
- REMEMBERG THE EARLY DAYS OF 'GAY CANCER'
- 1980S. HIV/AIDS: WHY WAS AIDS LLED ‘THE GAY PLAGUE’?
- CANCER FACTS FOR GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN
- HOW THE EARLY ’80S CHANGED GAY WRG FOREVER
- AS A GAY MAN, THE '80S CRIPPLED MY INTY
- GAY MEN AND CANCER
- GAY MEN AND THE STIGMA OF A CANCER DIAGNOSIS
REMEMBERG THE EARLY DAYS OF 'GAY CANCER'
Commentator Joe Wright spent more than 10 years dog AIDS muny work San Francis. He says that back 1981 and '82, before AIDS was lled AIDS, was lled "gay ncer." At the time, ncer was the most dread disease the Uned Stat. But for some of the men who had the myster new illns, llg "ncer" was a form of hope. Joe Wright is a stunt at Harvard Medil School. * gay cancer 80s *
Rememberg the Early Days of 'Gay Cancer' Commentator Joe Wright spent more than 10 years dog AIDS muny work San Francis.
And bee the first people diagnosed wh the new syndrome were gay men, some people started llg the disease Gay Cancer. Soon after he was diagnosed wh KS, he spent time troducg himself to men the Kaposi Sara clic wag room, vg them to the Shanti Project Gay Cancer support group.
1980S. HIV/AIDS: WHY WAS AIDS LLED ‘THE GAY PLAGUE’?
The early years of AIDS were a time of great fear and anxiety for gay men around the world.* The bulk of this was generated by the myster and lethal nature of this new ndn. But there was another element that exacerbated the suatn - the homophobia whipped up by irrponsible media. Central to this * gay cancer 80s *
Medilly, Bobbi Campbell knew that his so-lled gay ncer was very different than the kds of ncer that most of his patients the hospal had.
CANCER FACTS FOR GAY AND BISEXUAL MEN
Rearch suggts that some gay and bisexual men may face a number of barriers to gettg the health re and ncer screeng tts they need. Learn what you need to know about ncer risk and preventn. * gay cancer 80s *
Doctors New York and California have diagnosed among homosexual men 41 s of a rare and often rapidly fatal form of ncer.
But the doctors who have ma the diagnos, mostly New York Cy and the San Francis Bay area, are alertg other physicians who treat large numbers of homosexual men to the problem an effort to help intify more s and to rce the lay offerg chemotherapy sudn appearance of the ncer, lled Kaposi's Sara, has prompted a medil vtigatn that experts say uld have as much scientific as public health importance bee of what may teach about termg the of more mon typ of ncer. But the recent s, doctors at ne medil centers New York and seven hospals California have been diagnosg the ndn among younger men, all of whom said the urse of standard diagnostic terviews that they were homosexual.
HOW THE EARLY ’80S CHANGED GAY WRG FOREVER
* gay cancer 80s *
Friedman-Kien, the reportg doctors said that most s had volved homosexual men who have had multiple and equent sexual enunters wh different partners, as many as 10 sexual enunters each night up to four tim a of the patients have also been treated for viral fectns such as herp, cytomegalovis and hepatis B as well as parasic fectns such as amebiasis and giardiasis. ''The bt evince agast ntagn, '' he said, ''is that no s have been reported to date outsi the homosexual muny or women. A versn of this article appears prt on, Sectn A, Page 20 of the Natnal edn wh the headle: RARE CANCER SEEN IN 41 HOMOSEXUALS.
Jack Kg reflects on s July 1981, 26 s of Kaposi’s sara, an exceedgly rare ncer, were intified exclively gay men by doctors New York and California.
AS A GAY MAN, THE '80S CRIPPLED MY INTY
Cigarette smokg among gay men is nearly double that of the general populatn. Smokg is rponsible for 80% of all lung ncers, but also creas the risk for many other ncers, cludg lon ncer, ophageal ncer and anal ncer. The same high-risk stras of HPV (human papillomavis) that e most cervil ncers women * gay cancer 80s *
This me some weeks after a report was published by the Centre for Disease Control and Preventn scribg how five prevly healthy gay men had been diagnosed wh pnmocystis pnmonia. HIV had been spreadg, untected, through Ameri’s gay populatn sce around the early 1970s, a rult of sexual transmissn among a mographic whose promiscuy was not only a nventn of queer sociabily but a revolutnary polil act the wake of the 1969 Stonewall rebelln.
GAY MEN AND CANCER
It was not until 24 September, 1982 that the CDC would e the acronym Aids; medil practners had up to that pot signated the novel vis Grid (Gay Related Immune Deficiency), or more lloquially ‘gay ncer’, or ‘gay plague’ – the implitn beg that this was an exclively gay disease.
The play, which premiered off-Broadway May 1985, viscerally chronicl the earlit stggl faced by the Gay Men’s Health Crisis, the first Aids support clic the US, -found by Kramer New York 1982. Havg begun his reer as a Hollywood screenwrer before movg to wrg for the stage, Kramer, who died May aged 84, had never nceived of himself as a gay activist – fact his 1978 novel, Faggots, a sthg crique of the then norms of queer promiscuy, had ma him persona non grata New York’s gay muny the early 1980s.
The play h me like a tsunami – Craig LusThe roman-à-clef rells the first years of the North Amerin Aids crisis om the perspectiv of a rag tag group of gay activists, together formg the Gay Men’s Health Crisis agast a backdrop of polil actn; the play’s protagonist, Ned Weeks, is a thly veiled analogue for Kramer himself.
GAY MEN AND THE STIGMA OF A CANCER DIAGNOSIS
Kramer’s portra of what a generatn of gay men suffered renrs Ameri ak to a warzone, where the rps of victims are refed ath certifit and left to llect dt oversized refe bags, and funerals bee so equent as to be social events. The central difference is that Aids was perceived to be a gay-only disease long to the 1980s by an unsympathetic public, so there was ltle-to-no prsure on Reagan to rpond, his polil pal unthreatened by his silence.
At the same time, the notn that he himself was a homophobe is disputed: some argue that he was privately sympathetic to those livg wh Aids, regardls of his admistratn’s polici. That he was surround by bigots, however, is a matter of historil rerd: Pat Buchanan, who served as the Whe Hoe Communitns Director om Febary 1985 to March 1987, scribed the crisis as nature “exactg an awful retributn agast gay men” a 1983 op-ed for the New York Post; the Whe Hoe Prs Secretary Larry Speak, scribed as “the public face of the Reagan Era”, repeatedly sparred briefgs wh journalist Lter Ksolvg on qutns of Aids, oft wh the pejorative implitn that the latter was gay. In one scene, Ned’s brother, Ben, a lawyer for a major New York law firm, ref to s on the board of the GMHC, which Ned tak as not only a tac nouncement of the anisatn’s attempts to save gay liv but of his own queerns.