Thursday, October 27, 2016

The Fight Against AIDS Stigma Is Far from Over, Activists Say

Peter Staley was at the top of his game when AIDS took off in New York City in the 1980s. He was a Wall Street bond trader and didn't think the rumor about a disease affecting gay men was anything he needed to worry about.

He certainly never could have predicted that it would consume his life.

"I was a closeted gay man," Staley, 55, told NBC News. "I was completely disconnected from the established but mostly closeted gay community that existed in New York that was doing the early struggling against this new epidemic."

Now the HIV pandemic is more than 30 years old, and a new study out this week has put what one expert calls the final nail in the coffin of the idea that a single flight attendant carried HIV across the U.S. Instead, the study shows the virus probably arrived in New York City from the Caribbean around 1970, spreading to San Francisco in 1976 and then to the world. 

"It's shocking how this man's name has been sullied and destroyed by this incorrect history. He was not 'Patient Zero' and this study confirms it through genetic analysis," said Staley, who is currently teaching political activism at the Institute of Politics at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government. 

Click here for the full article. 

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