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By Karen Ocamb
(Editor's Note: On June 5, 1981, the Centers for Disease
Control (CDC) published the first report of a mysterious
new epidemic effecting five gay men in Los Angeles. On
April 13, 1982, Congressmember Henry Waxman (D-L.A.), chair
of the House Subcommittee on Health and the Environment,
held the first congressional hearing on the new disease
at the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Community Services Center.
By then 248 gay men had been diagnosed with the apparently
fatal Gay-Related Immune Deficiency (GRID, which later
became known as Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome or
AIDS), according to the late Randy Shilts in And the Band
Played On.
Tim Westmoreland, Waxman's openly gay subcommittee counsel,
wrote Waxman's opening remarks. "There is no doubt
in my mind," Waxman said, "that if the same
disease had appeared among Americans of Norwegian descent,
or among tennis players, rather than gay males, the responses
of both the government and the medical community would
have been different." The following are direct quotes
taken from an April 11 phone interview with Rep. Waxman.)
"According to the Centers for Disease Control, (the
new disease) was multiplying geometrically which meant that
what we were facing was spreading quite rapidly within the
gay male community and we didn't know what it was," Waxman
told IN. "Dr. Gottlieb of UCLA was giving care to
the first patients and thought that we ought to come to Los
Angeles -- it's my district -- and hear from people
here to try to understand what was happening.
"We did it at the Gay & Lesbian Service Center
because many of the people coming down with symptoms would
come (there) ... and I wanted to dramatize the fact
that this was a disease affecting gay men and it was a major
public health threat. We didn't realize the magnitude at
that point but we realized it could be very, very huge.
"I was very concerned at the time -- and continue
to be concerned -- that the attention paid to Kaposi's
sarcoma and now HIV/AIDS -- has always been less than
attention paid to other diseases, primarily because it affected
gay men ... President Reagan would never even say the
word 'AIDS.' It wasn't until Elizabeth Taylor personally
talked to him that he even acknowledged the disease. Part
of his failure and his reluctance to make it a high priority,
I think, had to do with his chief Domestic Policy Advisor
Gary Bauer. (He) was clearly with the religious extremist
right wing and their attitude was this seemed to be a disease
that was somewhat deserved. (In 1983, Reagan's communications
director Patrick Buchanan called AIDS "nature's revenge
on gay men.")
"We had a very difficult time with the extremist right
wing, trying to enact legislation. They didn't want to educate
people about the disease because they feared that people
would engage in gay sex if they heard about it ... and
I remember a lot of fear by the gay community that this disease
would be used to go after gay men, to isolate them. Throughout
those years, the top Republican on my subcommittee, Bill
Dannemeyer (R-Fullerton), advocated taking people who had
AIDS and isolating them on some island somewhere -- quarantining
them. (In his 1989 book, Dannemeyer dubbed gays and lesbians "the
ultimate enemy.")
"The people in the Department of Health and Human
Services were very much on top of this as a health issue ... (They)
would testify and give the administration's line and then
it was pre-arranged that if I asked questions about 'in their
best medical judgment, did they have enough (funding) for
this or that?' -- they would invariably (say) that the
administration's (budget) recommendation wasn't sufficient.
I thought they were courageous.
"One of the most courageous was C. Everett Koop. He
had been the choice of the religious right to be surgeon
general because he had lectured against abortions. But he
was a man of enormous integrity. He told the medical truth
about AIDS.
"The health professionals, even in the administration,
were very clear that this was not an easily transmitted disease -- from
sweat and tears and casual contact. There was a fear that
there was going to be a public reaction that even being near
a gay man might expose them to AIDS...
"Another interesting thing was the very active and
aggressive involvement of gay men. The Food and Drug Administration
worked on the model that you don't make drugs available until
they've been established as safe and effective -- and
that could take many years ... The whole idea for 'compassionate
use' came from ACT UP lawyers convincing the FDA that they
had the legal authority to release drugs still in clinical
trials, especially when the disease was as fatal as this.
"We finally passed the Ryan White Care Act -- named
after the young boy who had AIDS. I knew so many people who
died of AIDS who were gay men, the primary group affected
by AIDS. And yet when we worked out the bill -- between
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah and myself -- Sen. Hatch insisted
we call it the Ryan White Act. I guess I was just too anxious
to pass it rather than make a fight over that. Certainly
Ryan White deserved a tribute for his courageous fight. But
so many gay men had to fight as well.
"We had pretty much worked out the bill a year or
two earlier than when it passed but Sen. Jesse Helms held
it up. I remember saying to him that he did a great disservice,
that people were dying and needed this legislation right
away. He was offended at my comments. But I was offended
by his action.
"Ryan White is up for reauthorization and it's going
to be difficult because there's less money going into the
program while we're giving tax breaks to billionaires. And
that means there's going to be a greater fight for funds ... But
it's a very different problem than what we had in the beginning
when Jesse Helms wanted to make sure we didn't talk about
gay men or drug users."
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