GA Voice

The hidden costs of ‘quarantine’

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McGill University is a proud Montreal institutio­n which, according to Wikipedia, “counts among its alumni 12 Nobel laureates and 142 Rhodes Scholars.” And then there’s Georgia Rep. Betty Price, who tried to undo all of her alma mater’s acclaim when she made folks wonder what school granted her a medical degree.

The physician-turned-politician was attempting to make an anti-gay political point during a House committee meeting earlier this month, but wound up disgracing modern medicine when she, in the most passiveagg­ressive way, suggested locking away people living with HIV.

“I don’t want to say the quarantine word, but I guess I just said it,” Price said, even though she didn’t want to. Price is married to former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, who is also a physician and holds the inglorious distinctio­n of being the first cabinet member deemed too inept to serve the Trump Administra­tion.

Someone seriously needs to check on this couple’s past patients to make sure their treatments for chest pains or asthma didn’t include ether or witch’s blood.

Price displayed a provocativ­e ignorance about the state of HIV/AIDS. Price wasn’t talking about caging everyone living with HIV, only those who are not in treatment because “in the past they died more readily and then at that point they are not posing a risk.”

Little-known medical fact: People who have HIV but are not in treatment in 2017 die as “readily” as people who had HIV but were not in treatment in 1987. There have been no breakthrou­ghs in the healing power of doing nothing.

The folks who are not dying “more readily” are those who are on treatments, most of whom are undetectab­le, and they pose no risk to public health – as in zero. Just last month, the CDC recognized there is “effectivel­y no risk” of folks with an undetectab­le viral load transmitti­ng the disease, as proven “Public-private collaborat­ions have indeed helped thousands of HIV-positive individual­s gain access to life-saving medicines, and HIV-negative gay men enroll in PrEP regimens. But rather than seeing public health benefits, religious conservati­ves like Price view these programs as taxpayer-subsidized sodomy.” in studies involving thousands of seriodisco­rdant couples engaging in unprotecte­d sex without a single infection occurring.

Public-private collaborat­ions have indeed helped thousands of HIV-positive individual­s gain access to life-saving medicines, and HIVnegativ­e gay men enroll in PrEP regimens. But rather than seeing public health benefits, religious conservati­ves like Price view these programs as taxpayer-subsidized sodomy.

They will come after them as irrational­ly as they attack birth control, both in public policy and private insurance choices, widening the scope of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Hobby Lobby decision that allows companies to invoke their “sincerely held religious beliefs” to withhold benefits. Their strategy to fight HIV ranks their moral superiorit­y a higher priority than saving lives, and they’re more open to paying for the removal of HIV-positive individual­s than the treatment of them.

Unfortunat­ely, although many heterosexu­als think quarantini­ng folks sounds wacky, our cultural understand­ing of HIV/AIDS remains stunted in the mid-’90s. It doesn’t take a Nobel laureate or Rhodes Scholar to know there’s a market for the political potions that evangelica­ls are brewing, and which Price spilled across the table. Ryan Lee is an Atlanta writer.

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