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The Global Impact of AIDS


Article # : 13131 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 11 / 1987  2,770 Words
Author : Evans Johnson
Evans Johnson was a foreign correspondent based in several Middle Eastern countries from 1975 to 1982, and is now an associate editor with the New York City Tribune.

        As the newest deadly communicable disease spreads quickly around the world, the developing nations, already hard-pressed financially, will find it difficult to cope with the economic and social impact of the epidemic.
       
        The developing and less developed nations, particularly in Africa, are in danger of losing a generation of leaders to what has been called potentially "the plague of the millennium."
       
        "If you were the devil, you couldn't conceive of a disease that would be more disruptive and disturbing than this one," said Dr. Alvin Friedman-Kien, a New York University dermatologist.
       
        In the scant few years since the first cases were diagnosed in the late 1970s, AIDS has grown into the single most controversial health topic in the United States, and it has shaken to the core the world health community. As an official with the World Health Organization (WHO) put it, "With the eradication of smallpox, we thought we had the communicable diseases on the run. We were absolutely stunned as we came to realize that an entirely new, deadly communicable disease had appeared out of nowhere."
       
        In central Africa, where many scientists now believe the disease had its origins - although they admit they do not know how it began or exactly where - AIDS is spreading rapidly among the young, educated elite. The CIA estimates that five million people may die from AIDS there within the next five years.
       
        The "devastation" of the ranks of the elite in African and other ... (1997 of 16088 Characters)
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