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The AIDS Ordeal


Article # : 13136 

Section : EDITORIAL
Issue Date : 11 / 1987  1,832 Words
Author : Morton A. Kaplan
Editor and Publisher

        AIDS - acquired immunodeficiency syndrome - struck fear into the hearts of people when it first appeared a few years ago. The disease appears to be invariably fatal, although it may develop more slowly in some than in others. The prominence of some of the victims focused public attention upon the disease as surely as did its fatal characteristics.
       
        AIDS has produced a crisis in values as well. In particular, it has created a serious conflict between the values of privacy and safety, or between a liberal and a controlled society, at least with respect to matters involving the disease.
       
        When AIDS first appeared, it seemed to be a disease restricted to male homosexuals. This reassured mainstream society and even led some among the uncharitable to refer to it as God's punishment upon sinners. This feeling of relief was not greatly diminished by the discovery that drug users also contracted the disease through the use of dirty needles.
       
        As with all new diseases, we know very little about it, and surely there are surprises in store. A few have already appeared. For instance, at least one dentist has contracted AIDS from a patient and several physicians became victims when blood from AIDS victims fell upon abrasions on their hands.
       
        Concern has increased as hemophiliacs, heterosexuals, and attending medical workers have contracted the disease. Curiously, boxing referees and cornermen in New Jersey are now required to wear rubber gloves, although the fighters - who would seem to be far more vulnerable to the mixing of blood or saliva - are ... (1995 of 10244 Characters)
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