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Gays
Debate Radical Steps to Curb Unsafe Sex
By
Andrew Jacobs
Reprinted with permission from The New York Times
After all the thousands of AIDS deaths
and all the years of "Safe Sex Is Hot Sex" prevention messages,
it has come down to this: many gay men who know the rules of engagement
in the age of AIDS are not using condoms. As news of a potentially
virulent strain of HIV settles in, gay activists and AIDS prevention
workers say they are dismayed and angry that the 25-year-old battle
against the disease might have to begin all over again.
While
many are calling for a renewed commitment to prevention efforts
and free condoms, some veterans of the war on AIDS are advocating
an entirely new approach to the spread of unsafe sex, much of which
is fueled by a surge in methamphetamine
abuse. They want to track down those who knowingly engage
in risky behavior and try to stop them before they can infect others.
It
is a radical idea, born of desperation that has been gaining ground
in recent months as a growing number of gay men become infected
despite warnings about unsafe sex.
Although
gay advocates and health care workers are just beginning to talk
about how this might be done, it could involve showing up at places
where impromptu sex parties happen and confronting the participants.
Or it might mean infiltrating Web sites that promote gay hookups
and thwarting liaisons involving crystal meth.
Other
ideas include collaborating with health officials in tracking down
the partners of those newly infected with HIV At the very least,
these advocates say, gay men must start taking responsibility for
their own, before a resurgent epidemic draws government officials
who could use even more aggressive tactics.
"Gay
men do not have the right to spread a debilitating and often fatal
disease," said Charles Kaiser, a historian and author of "The
Gay Metropolis." "A person who is HIV-positive has no
more right to unprotected intercourse than he has the right to put
a bullet through another person's head," he said.
While
not endorsing specific strategies, even mainstream organizations
like the Gay Men's Health Crisis support the idea of trying methods
that would have been anathema a few years ago. "It makes a
community stronger when we take care of ourselves," said Ana
Oliveira, the organization's executive director, "and if that
means that we have to be much more present and intervene with people
who are doing this to themselves and others, then so be it."
For
many others, however, even talk of such steps provokes hand-wringing.
"We don't want public health vigilantes going out and taking
matters into their own hands, particularly if it means breaching
the confidentially and civil rights of people with HIV," said
Jon Givner, the director of the HIV Project at the Lambda Legal
Defense and Education Fund. "Frankly, I find it pretty scary."
Whether
such ideas gain acceptance, the fact that activists are even thinking
about curbing gay sexual freedom is a huge shift.
In
the early years of the AIDS epidemic, gay men protested attempts
to close down bathhouses and strenuously opposed efforts by health
officials to trace those infected with the virus. Until now, those
advocates, driven by concerns about privacy and the stigma associated
with the disease, have successfully fought off efforts to impose
a traditional public-health model for tackling the spread of the
virus.
"You
have to remember that was the era when Jesse Helms and others were
saying that gay people got what they deserved, and that the government
shouldn't spend any money to help them," said David Evans,
an HIV treatment advocate who writes about prevention. "There
was a time when people thought, 'Oh my god, they're going to put
us in camps.' "
Such
fears have faded in recent years, thanks in part to laws that protect
people with AIDS against discrimination. Although the number of
AIDS-related deaths has plummeted since the advent of a more potent
class of drugs in the mid-90's, the rate of new infections has remained
unchanged at about 40,000 cases a year, frustrating many advocates.
That
frustration has been ratcheted up by the growing popularity of crystal
meth in New York, which many say has led to an abrupt increase in
unsafe behavior and a spate of infections. Although exact figures
are difficult to determine, a recent survey of gay men found that
25 percent had tried crystal meth in the last few months.
Those
frustrations were given voice in November by Larry Kramer, the playwright
and activist who himself has AIDS, in a widely discussed speech
at Cooper Union in which he criticized gay men for their behavior.
"You are still murdering each other," he said then. "Please
stop with all the generalizations and avoidance excuses gays have
used since the beginning to ditch this responsibility for this fact."
In
an interview, Mr. Kramer said on Sunday that the warning of a possibly
aggressive new strain of HIV confirmed his fears and filled him
with a sense of hopelessness. "Even in the days of the worst
infections, no amount of prevention seemed to work, and that's probably
the scariest thing of all," he said.
Even
if the warning turns out to be a false alarm, many AIDS experts
say it is only a matter of time before a supervirus does emerge.
"You
can't have a core group of people having sex with large numbers
of people without amplifying any sexually transmitted disease that
enters the system," said Gabriel Rotello, author of "Sexual
Ecology: AIDS and the Destiny of Gay Men." "I don't have
any doubt that a resurgent HIV epidemic will hit the gay population
in the near future," he said.
It
is this fear of a drug-resistant virus that has driven some who
track the spread of AIDS to suggest a more aggressive approach to
prevention. Walter Armstrong, the editor in chief of Poz, a monthly
magazine about AIDS and HIV, said the traditional fear-based approach
to prevention was at best only a temporary solution, especially
if no supervirus outbreak materializes. A more effective approach,
he said, would involve gay organizations using traditional public
health measures, such as more widespread screening and a partner-notification
effort to track users of crystal meth who have been infected recently.
"Why
would it not be possible to get them together to communicate to
each other, and then to their sex partners, that lives are being
put at risk by reckless behavior?" he asked. "I think
there are ways to do interventions ethically, sensitively and compassionately.
There's a huge window of opportunity between criminalization and
empty prevention messages."
Still,
others remain wary of such measures. Walt Odets, a clinical psychologist
and the author of "In the Shadow of the Epidemic: Being HIV-Negative
in the Age of AIDS," said he thought such intervention smacked
of a witch hunt.
He
and others said it would be more effective to try to identify the
underlying causes of drug abuse and self-destructive behavior, including
the difficulty of living in a society that rejects committed gay
relationships while condemning homosexuals for having sex outside
those relationships. Gay men, he said, are using methamphetamines
as an anti-depressant.
Many
health experts suggest a more vigorous return to conventional HIV
prevention. Isaac Weisfuse, the city's deputy commissioner of health,
said his agency was planning to place information banners on gay
Web sites and devote more money to hard-hitting ads about methamphetamine
use.
And,
he noted, the free condom has largely disappeared from public places.
"Unfortunately, condom use has fallen off the radar screen,"
he said. "We need to do something we did well 20 years ago,
which is to get condoms in every place people socialize or have
sex."
Others,
like Mr. Rotello, were less optimistic. Until people really believe
an unstoppable virus is out there, he said, they will continue to
indulge in unsafe sexual practices. "People are not going to
modify their sexual habits in ways that are difficult or unpleasant
until they see their friends dying again," he said. "And
to me that's just an unbelievably depressing thought."
02/16/05
From
The New York Times on the web © The New York Times Company.
Reprinted with Permission.
02/14/05
Source
The New York Times. February 14, 2005. A-1.
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