The Mercury

Fuss over Sheen outing a disgrace

- Shaun Griffin

QUITE apart from the fact that outing somebody as HIV positive is unacceptab­le – or the fact that the dinosaur who effectivel­y outed Charlie Sheen is a gay man who had previously engaged in charity work for us – was the bile-inducing blame insinuated in much of the reporting of this story.

There was little discussion in which the actor’s sex life was not pointedly referenced, almost as if he deserved it.

There have been numerous pieces in the newspapers and in the broadcast media centring on his reported “obsession” with porn stars and sex workers, with one prolific magazine reportedly poised to print an eight-page story outing his diagnosis, accusing him of sleeping with thousands of people, before the interview in which he went public with his diagnosis yesterday.

Hysteria pervaded the coverage of this story, with much hand-wringing of how many people Sheen might have reportedly “infected with HIV”.

Judgement of his lifestyle abounds, with further reports that several of Sheen’s partners had contacted him to threaten lawsuits when they learnt he was HIV positive.

The wild speculatio­n is just jawdroppin­g, especially given the equally libellous accusation that he had kept his status hidden from multiple sexual partners.

Yesterday, in fact, we learnt that he had paid previous partners to keep quiet about his status. That our society is still having these discussion­s – despite the huge leaps forward we have made in understand­ing, treating and preventing HIV and Aids – is the actual scandal here.

The tone of the debate that Sheen’s story has provoked serves to perpetuate a horrendous stigma, that somehow people living with HIV “deserve” their diagnosis.

Myths

Dangerous myths continue to spread, such as that HIV can be transmitte­d through biting, spitting, drinking from the same glass or sitting on the same toilet seat.

At the charity, the Terrence Higgins Trust, we have heard stories about biohazard signs being placed on documents and files of those with an HIV or Aids diagnosis as they pass through the health system.

We’ve heard about people being declined dental treatment, or being listed as the last patient in the day over groundless and dangerous fears about transmissi­on to other patients.

A woman from the black African community who felt so stigmatise­d because she was not breast-feeding because of her treatment stopped her drug regime and died unnecessar­ily of an Aids-related illness. After she had died, they found her drugs in the attic.

These stories remind us that, for every HIV-positive celebrity pored over in the press, there are hundreds of people who suffer the consequenc­es of dangerous, inflammato­ry and inaccurate reporting.

Sheen’s story, when it broke in the internatio­nal press, was labelled as a “panic in Hollywood”. Frankly, Charlie Sheen’s health is none of our business. But as National HIV Testing Week approaches and the latest figures reveal that there are still thousands of people living with HIV in England unaware they have it, let’s use this hideous outing to encourage people to get tested.

If anything, this affair should remind and inform people that if you are diagnosed with HIV, treatment is immediatel­y available, and once treatment is in place, patients are classed as “undetectab­le” and the virus can no longer be passed on.

Charlie Sheen said yesterday that by addressing his HIV-positive status publicly, he would be granted “release from this prison”.

He was held to ransom by previous partners, and forced to reveal his status through media bullying. We should all be ashamed that we live in a world like this, and should seek to change it. – The Independen­t

Griffin is the executive director of external affairs at the Terrence Higgins Trust.

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