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From: PlusNews <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, May 2, 2012 at 6:24 PM
Subject: HIV/AIDS: New book tracks the epidemic to its origins
To: Elisabeth Janaina <[email protected]>


HIV/AIDS: New book tracks the epidemic to its origins

MBABANE, 2 May 2012 (PLUSNEWS) - We've all heard the myths and
hypotheses about the origins of the epidemic caused by the HI virus,
but a new book, "Tinderbox: How the West Sparked the AIDS Epidemic and
How the World Can Finally Overcome It", sheds more light on where it
all began. It is a fascinating account of the medical detective work
that traced the disease to Cameroon a century ago.

"AIDS is not a new disease. With 'Tinderbox' we wanted to write a
defining AIDS book for this generation that will get people excited to
talk about AIDS again. We were able to apply new discoveries on the
origin of AIDS," said Daniel Halperin, who co-wrote the book with
American journalist Craig Timberg.

Scientists have long known that a blood sample preserved in a hospital
in Kinshasa, capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, dating from
1959, indicated that HIV had been around decades before it was
recognized in the 1980s. In 2008, Michael Worobey of the University of
Arizona reported on a second sample of the virus, from a lymph node
biopsy taken in Kinshasa in 1960, which helped establish the virus'
evolutionary timeline.

"By comparing these two historic pieces of virus and mapping out the
differences in their genetic structures in his lab at the University
of Arizona, Worobey determined that HIV-1 group M was much older than
anyone had thought. Both samples of the virus appeared to have
descended from a single ancestor at some time between 1884 and 1924.
The most likely date was 1908," the book recounted.

Meanwhile, a research team led by microbiologist Beatrice Hahn of the
University of Alabama pinpointed the geographic location of the virus.
An SIV (simian immunodeficiency virus) infecting chimpanzees in
Cameroon proved to be an identical match to HIV-1 group M.

"This SIV was likely around for centuries and may very well have been
passed on to a hunter or someone handling the carcass of an infected
chimp. The chimp's blood could have infected the person through an
open wound," said Halperin.

The authors add a dimension that has received little attention:
colonialism and how it helped spread the HIV epidemic. "Once the virus
made the jump from chimp to human, a single infected person could have
carried HIV down the Sangha [River], on to the Congo River and into
Kinshasa. The Belgians had founded the city in 1881; by the early 20th
century, Kinshasa, then called Leopoldville, was the biggest city in
central Africa, fuelled by the dizzying growth of trade with the
outside world."

The epidemic was born between 1881 and 1924. A few decades later, the
virus had migrated far from its point of origin, mutating into new but
equally deadly subtypes.

"Scientists studying HIV-1 group M already had found many related
varieties - what scientists call subtypes - each with slightly
different genetic structures and paths through the world. One,
scientists discovered, had travelled east from Kinshasa toward Lake
Victoria. One went south to Zambia, Botswana and South Africa. One
hopped all the way across the ocean to Haiti, then to the United
States and Europe," Halperin and Timberg wrote.

They are not complimentary about efforts to combat the spread of HIV.
"On the prevention side, the United States and other donors have
fallen short. Part of the problem has been the polarized nature of
AIDS politics, with its battles over condoms versus abstinence. Few
outsiders - not the US government, the United Nations, religiously
based charities, or even the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation - have
made impressive gains in preventing the spread of HIV among adults,
despite massive investments of money and political will," Timberg told
IRIN/PlusNews.

The book notes that the steepest drop in HIV infection rates in the
past 15 years occurred in Zimbabwe, a country that received less
foreign aid than its neighbours during this period.

"When debating how to prevent HIV, liberals like to talk about
condoms, while conservatives often talk about abstinence. Yet the
track record for both ideas has been disappointing," said Timberg.

Halperin, an epidemiologist who has worked on AIDS policies for
several southern African countries in the past decade while Timberg
was covering AIDS in the region for the Washington Post, told
IRIN/PlusNews that engaging in sex with multiple partners was also a
root cause of the epidemic's origin more than a century ago.

One goal of "Tinderbox" is to change public perceptions about AIDS. No
longer a great mystery, HIV has been identified as a mutable virus
with a documented history. The second popular perception the book
addresses is that AIDS prevention and treatment can be "one size fits
all".

The authors believe that the key ingredient in bringing the epidemic
under control - the "behaviour change" that has eluded so many AIDS
prevention initiatives - can best be achieved through internal rather
than external actors.

"The evidence is abundant that if you have more than one partner, the
chance of HIV infection is increased. It is sometimes difficult for
Africans to talk about sexual things in a one-on-one setting. What we
found effective is when people talk collectively. If you take a look
at the places where HIV went down dramatically, it was where members
of society talked to one another: Zimbabwe, Uganda and elsewhere. We
saw musicians, leaders, politicians leading the discussions. It is
harder if this information comes from foreigners, or anyone outside
the community or social group or even family," said Timberg.

jh/kn/he

[END]

This report online: http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=95399



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