Killing us Softly
Gary Leigh
He remembers the "no nonsense" strategies of the 1980s, and says the gay
health charities have some tough questions to answer and says more debate is needed
on HIV prevention.
“While significant breakthroughs in the progress of gay rights
have been achieved in the UK over the last decade, the community has paid a devastating
price with its sexual health.
Britain has almost twice as many new cases of HIV than
any other western European country. Latest figures show that gay and bisexual men
accounted for 38 per cent of all new HIV diagnoses in 2008, prompting the Health
Protection Agency to join the deafening call for more to be done at community level
to reverse the trend.
Since 1999 recorded HIV transmissions between men have doubled;
from 1,450 to 2,830 cases a year. During that time, gay men’s sexual health charities
hungry for funding forged closer links to government statutory bodies and began slavishly
following their diktats and directives to secure taxpayers’ cash. As one sexual health
worker told GT in 2007: “We have been working to NHS specifications since 2001.”
Consequently, the impassioned, no-nonsense strategies that once defined the sector’s
HIV prevention efforts were superseded by a lumbering, bureaucratic, performance
management-led approach which responds more quickly and efficiently to the market
forces created by the needs of rising numbers of HIV-infected people than to providing
timely and appropriate community responses efficiently targeted at those still at
risk of contracting the virus.
The significant breakthroughs in life-prolonging anti-retrovirals
over the same period that shifted the general perception of HIV/Aids from killer
to chronic disease have only compounded the prioritisation of HIV management over
prevention. Politically correct sexual health charities now call HIV/Aids a “manageable
illness” and even claim that modern treatments can enable a normal lifespan - a strategy
that has demonstrably served to fuel a climate of complacency and indifference around
the virus.
Regardless of how HIV/Aids has been rebranded in recent years, it remains
a terminal condition and life-long health risk with no cure in sight. Acquisition
demands the abandonment of personal freedom and complete dependency on a regimented
supply of costly, toxic drugs supplied by the state to survive and function. Fourteen
per cent of HIV-infected people are resistant to some or all three of the most common
classes of anti-retrovirals, and several hundred still die each year from Aids-related
complications.
Whether HIV/Aids cuts short someone’s life by ten, 20 or 30 years,
or they succumb to dementia, cancer or liver or heart disease arising from the terrible
side effects associated with Aids drugs, common sense dictates that the message remains
the same and is non-negotiable: HIV is not an option. However, state meddling and
failure to ensure that HIV prevention funding is being properly utilised and targeted
means that a very different message is being “sold” by gay men’s health charities
today.
Where uncompromisingly upfront HIV campaigns once instilled the need to always
“play safe” and use condoms, the last decade has seen that message cynically stripped
down and diluted in a PC-driven fervour that has sought to soften, normalise and
“sex-up” the virus’s image This approach has resulted in subliminally confusing,
one-size-fits-all campaigns emphasising risk minimisation over prevention aimed at
negative and positive men alike through fear of being perceived to be discriminating
against, or judgemental towards, those with the virus. The morphing from the impactful
pre-1999 HIV campaigns to today’s “sex positive” slogans and provocatively suggestive
mixed messages and double meanings like ‘Reduce the Risk: Cum Outside’, ‘Enjoy F**king
(Without Condoms)’, ‘Get It On’ and ‘From The Bottom To The Top’ correlates directly
to the rampant rise in condom-less sex (barebacking) and doubling in HIV conversions
over the same period.
“Instead of giving us a picture of what our lives could be
like if we bareback, [the HIV charities] choose to ‘empower’ us,” wrote former Boyz
news editor, Karl Riley, 23, in the Guardian last February. “They do that by saying:
‘If you are the active partner you’re less likely to get HIV’ and ‘If you withdraw,
then you and your partner are at less risk of contracting HIV.’ When was the last
time you were told that if you're going to drink/drive you should opt for a bottle
of wine instead of tequila slammers? Or saw the withdrawal method advocated to prevent
pregnancy?”
In a 2008 survey, 82 per cent of Pink Paper readers voted for harder-hitting
HIV campaigns, yet HIV charity workers programmed by a belief system that masquerades
as progressive thinking, but which rigidly and forcefully opposes the mainstream
consensus, defiantly insist that shock tactics don’t work. Yet official statistics
record that the rate of HIV infections steadily declined to their lowest level by
the mid-1990s when hard-hitting campaigns were the norm – not unlike today’s graphic
anti-smoking campaigns which successfully encourage people to quit and, in turn,
are self-financing because they reduce healthcare costs. Furthermore, between 2001-06
– the first five-year period during which the HIV sector worked to NHS specifications
– the HIV infection rate soared by 58 per cent. Over the same period, Aids-ravaged
San Francisco adopted hard-hitting campaigns depicting the harsh realities of living
with the disease with taglines like ‘HIV Is No Picnic’ – a no-nonsense approach that
elicited howls of anger and vilification from the city’s PC HIV lobby despite reducing
infection rates there by 20 per cent!
As long as the HIV charity sector continues
to “victimise” HIV-positive individuals, it will shun “stigmatising” graphic campaigns
above the need to educate effectively about the devastating, life-eroding implications
of contracting HIV. The fact that most HIV-positive people do take full responsibility
for their condition renders HIV stigma a smokescreen that has served only to normalise
and mainstream the virus. Indeed, most are more offended at being regarded as helpless
victims than they would be by the “judgemental” or “scare-mongering” pitfalls of
HIV/Aids being transmitted to those at risk if such messages empowered negative men
to make better-informed decisions about the type of sex they have.
The HIV sector
also cites “condom fatigue” and infers that gay men no longer take notice of safe
sex campaigns, period, to explain away soaring HIV rates. Yet since these excuses
entered circulation an entirely new, sexually impressionable generation of gay youth
has emerged that hasn’t been around long enough to tire of condoms, let alone witness
an effective HIV campaign. Clearly we are supposed to believe that gay men somehow
agreed to ditch condoms and ignore safe sex campaigns in a universal pact of recklessness
when, in fact, they have collectively been influenced into riskier behaviours by
the last decade’s suicidal shift in attitude to HIV/Aids as expediated by the HIV
charities themselves, who these days give every impression of jostling to find ever
more brazen and inventive ways to soften HIV’s image and legitimise unsafe sex.
A
year ago, for example, HIV prevention was turned on its head when government funds
were diverted from mainstream campaigning altogether to projects instigated by the
Terrence Higgins Trust aimed at London’s “underground” sex scene. Launched on the
pretext of intervening in the spread of HIV “where it occurs”, the ‘Play Zone’ seal
endorses gay saunas and sex-on-premises venues that sign up to a largely unenforceable
“code of good practise”. It was quickly followed by ‘Hardcell’, a graphically explicit,
no-holds-barred web site designed to educate “curious” men about the “thrills” and
risks associated with humiliating and often degrading forms of extreme, high-risk
sex that feeds on low self-esteem. Both projects were enthusiastically fan-fared
in club mags aimed at 18-25 year-olds, thus bringing the growing breed of once marginalised
sex clubs that cater for disempowering and dangerous forms of ‘tough sex’ above ground.
The right of such clubs to exist isn’t the debate. That they are loyally supported
and fiercely defended by HIV/sexual health charities, which such clubs co-fund at
World Aids Day fundraisers where condoms are routinely shunned, is. By association,
the overall safe sex message only becomes further confused and diminished in the
absence of unambiguous HIV campaigning targeted at the wider gay community, while
those participating in the extreme sex scene play by their own rules and risk being
driven even further underground by attempts to police their environments.
Today,
no longer do those who wield the HIV prevention budgets even pretend to assume that
gay men practise safe sex as a rule. ‘THIVK You May Have HIV?’ is one of several
programmes that employs NLP techniques to encourage gay men to get tested on the
statistical pretext that one in four already have HIV without knowing, itself a shameless
admission of failed HIV prevention policy. Emphasising the inevitability of contracting
HIV may seem like the ultimate betrayal of the pre-anti-retroviral era safe sex message,
but one ongoing HIV campaign goes further still.
PEP (post-exposure prophylaxis)
is a 28-day course of the Aids drugs Combivir and Kaletra that, if taken within 72
hours after exposure to HIV, “may” prevent the virus taking hold in the body. Originally
provided to health professionals exposed to HIV, pressure from within the gay community
to make PEP available after accidental exposure during sex initially met with resistance
from a number of STI clinics, who warned that general distribution would lead to
riskier behaviour.
Although inviting comparisons with the morning-after pill, PEP’s
ability to lower the body’s tolerance to Aids drugs along with side effects including
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, severe headaches and stomach cramps makes it, in theory,
suitable only as a one-off treatment. However, in 2006 the chief medical officer
Liam Donaldson mandated PEP for “non-occupational exposure.” Public funds were thrown
at HIV/sexual health charities to raise PEP’s awareness among gay men, and they did
so with a frenzied urgency absent from any “pre-exposure” HIV campaigns before or
since.
“We can saturate the gay press with information about PEP and there will still
be men who need to know about it who don't,” implored THT’s press officer Will Nutland
as near-identical PEP campaigns by several charities began rotating in the same gay
press, on dating and hook-up sites and gay teens resource Puffta to name a few, while
PEP booklets were prominently positioned in bars and clubs and handed out to men
cruising for sex in saunas and sex clubs. Despite the analogy with the morning-after
pill, THT’s blazing red fire extinguisher campaign threw caution out of the window
by declaring You must start PEP within 72 hours of unsafe sex or a condom breaking,
effectively touting PEP as a “quick-fix” for premeditated sexual recklessness as
well as genuine slip-ups from the outset.
Nearly three years later, PEP campaigns
are still being rolled out by the HIV sector at the expense of prioritising condom
use or educating about the flipside of living with HIV/Aids, the hyperbole now ramped
up from “may prevent HIV developing” to “can”. THT defends its unwavering support
of PEP by claiming that 80 per cent of users don’t go on to develop HIV, notwithstanding
that HIV is extremely difficult to acquire in the first place and it’s scientifically
impossible to prove the reason for a negative outcome. Beyond the hysteria, however,
the fact remains: PEP’s efficacy is unknown. While at best it may have played a role
in preventing some HIV transmissions developing following one-off emergencies, its
growing reputation as a golden bullet to manage premeditated risky sex has unquestionably
influenced more men into taking calculated sexual risks, using PEP and seroconverting
than would otherwise have occurred.
As far back as 2005, a Sigma Research survey
of sexually active gay men found that half had sought PEP following unprotected sex
– a third with someone they already knew to be HIV-positive – as opposed to a condom
breaking. Since then, hospitals and overstretched STI clinics across the UK have
reported PEP being requested by repeat users attempting to “manage” unsafe sex. “I
met an HIV-positive on the net who shocked me when he said he had f**ked a guy without
protection, came inside him, disclosed afterwards, and then advised him how to get
PEP,” wrote John Williams in Positive Nation magazine.
At what point does PEP go
from being a drug all gay men “need to know about” to a disproportionate, thinly-veiled
marketing exercise that overrides public health concerns and benefits only the charities
funded to push the treatment on behalf of the pharmaceutical companies they are in
bed with? GlaxoSmithKline, for example, makes Combivir and is a longstanding donor
to THT. At around £600 per course, PEP is being liberally dispensed and abused at
a time when the NHS has been refusing to fund vital cancer treatments and Alzheimer’s
drugs costing a few pounds.
The impact of PEP overkill and all-round failure of sexual
health education on the annual NHS drugs bill is mind-boggling. The Health Protection
Agency estimates the cost to treat just one person let down by the breakdown in HIV
prevention for the rest of their life at between £113,000-201,000; roughly the cost
of blanket advertising a graphic, upfront HIV campaign in the gay and mainstream
media that could prevent many more seroconverting in the first place, saving the
taxpayer untold millions in treatment costs and welfare payouts.
“There hasn’t been
a decent HIV campaign in years,” HIV specialist Dr Christian Jessen told the Metro
in 2008. “If directed at those genuinely at high risk of infection, there is nothing
wrong with harder-hitting tactics. If it protects health and saves lives, then the
end justifies the means.” Yet the drumbeat for effective action against HIV continues
to go ignored by the medically unqualified, media-trained bureaucrats and academics
who manage the HIV sector gravy train with an iron grip as overstretched frontline
workers daily dispense positive HIV diagnoses to vulnerable, sexually illiterate
gay youth not long out of school and onto the sexually pressurised big city scenes,
where they are failed twice over by a community that has learned little from its
recent, tragic past.
For many gay under-25s today, barebacking is accepted and even
embraced, and the thought of contracting HIV is no more of an inconvenience than
any other STI or even catching a cold (a recent survey of Puffta members aged 12-19
found that 47 per cent claim not to always practice safe sex and 53 per cent don’t
know their HIV status). Most 20-year-olds contemplating “raw sex” naively assume
that access to free anti-retrovirals are an automatic right, not pausing to consider
what future government policy may dictate nor where imminent pubic services cuts
will strike (the government is demanding £2.3 billion in savings from the Department
of Health alone).
In March 2008, BBC Newsnight reported on three such men who contracted
HIV shooting a scene for a DVD catering for the growing trade in bareback porn. Rather
than confront the underlying issues behind why bareback porn has become so popular
or speak out against an industry that is profiteering by undoing years of safe sex
campaigning with the same forcefulness it uses to discredit those calling for a hard-line
approach to HIV prevention, the HIV sector has remained remorselessly tight-lipped.
“If gay men don’t want porn stars to risk their health, they should stop buying bareback
porn,” was the response of Matthew Hodson, head of programmes at GMFA, the self-dubbed
“Gay Men’s Health Charity”, which itself has arguably contributed to the rebranding
of barebacking as an acceptable lifestyle choice and helped popularise the image
of HIV among naïve youngsters like those infected shooting condom-less porn. One,
a 22-year-old named John, told Newsnight: “I knew the risks from the start and I
was happy with that.”
Terrifyingly, the true cost of contracting HIV is fast becoming
lost on an emerging generation of gay men who are being encouraged to take bigger
and bigger risks with their health by those mandated to protect them. “I volunteered
to help GMFA build a web site to educate the seemingly ignorant generation of gay
and straight youth on the issue of HIV/Aids,” a contributor told Homovision TV in
April. “But I was shocked when I was told they wanted a ‘How to minimise risk when
having unsafe sex’ section. You can imagine the uproar if a publicly funded anti-gun
crime site had a section on ‘How to reduce risk playing Russian roulette’.”
In February,
Time Out’s gay editor Paul Burston organised a public forum to discuss the rise of
bareback porn, but THT and GMFA stayed away. “Better to stick with ads that say ‘So
you’re HIV, now what?’ and feed the idea that HIV is somehow inevitable,” Burston
lamented. “It’s not, and the last thing we should be telling the younger generation
is that it is.”
“Lots of people are making money out of normalising barebacking,
whether through porn or clubs offering ‘raw’ nights,” warned Johann Hari in the Independent
back in 2006. “Crystal meth is also spreading on the gay party scene. It makes you
horny and lowers your sense of risk – a recipe for unprotected sex.” Nevertheless,
the need to emphasise crystal meth’s unparalleled correlation with HIV conversion
and the considerable damage it inflicts on the immune systems of those already compromised
by HIV has been vigorously resisted by the HIV sector.
Such insanity is mirrored
in other Western countries where well-meaning but misguided HIV organisations singing
from identical PC songsheets preaching “personal freedom” and “non-discrimination”
are sleepwalking gay communities into public health disasters. “Follow the money,”
says Michael Weinstein, president of California’s AIDS Healthcare Foundation. “Tens
of millions are being spent to promote a lifestyle that drastically increases the
chance of becoming infected with HIV. We have become co-conspirators with the virus.
We fight for money to treat HIV but do virtually nothing to prevent it. Let’s raise
the bar and demand of ourselves that we stop this epidemic before the next generation
becomes infected.”
It will take a monumental gear shift to begin reversing the normalisation
of HIV and barebacking when the latest THT campaign supposedly intended to tackle
record STI rates features sexually provocative slogans like ‘Come Again And Again’,
‘Huge Satisfaction’ and ‘Fast Mover’, and the mainstreaming of unsafe sex is being
taken to a whole new level by HIV sector workers who are now openly demonising anyone
who dares speak out against the sexually irresponsible while vigorously defending
those criminally prosecuted for deliberately or recklessly infecting others with
the virus.
The total lack of accountability and open and honest debate on the governance
of the gay community’s sexual health has, over the last decade, allowed HIV to spiral
out of control. As the chorus call to get tough with the virus all over again reaches
fever pitch, that debate must finally begin in earnest. Failure to do so will make
today’s infection rates seem like a drop in the ocean in years to come.”
Gary Leigh
is the founder of Life or Meth. http://www.lifeormet.com
Source: http://www.pinknews.co.uk/news/articles/2005-13675.html

Copyright I Contact us I Top I Next