In an article published in the June 8th 1999 issue of the
Washington Times comes a story that reports on a 20 percent drop in AIDS
cases from 1997
to 1998. According to the Times article, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in
Atlanta posted the number of AIDS cases as going from approximately 60,000 in 1997, to
48,000 in 1998. This astounding turn around represents a 20% reduction in one year.
This information comes in stark contrast to the dire predictions made
earlier. The Times article highlighted several dooms-day claims listed below. "There
may be no one left (without massive federal aid)" Donna Shalala, HHS secretary.
"By 1991, 1 in 10 babies may be AIDS victims." USA Today 1988. In 1987 Oprah
Winfrey stated on her show that a fifth of heterosexuals would be dead of AIDS by 1990.
Over the last 2 decades, the media has definitely blown the alarm of
warning about AIDS. As history has shown over many thousands of years, diseases have a
cyclical pattern where they first attack more violently at first. This is followed by a
reduction in the strength and number of cases of the disease. This is not to state that we
should not be concerned. But we should be aware of the facts. Below is a list of facts on
AIDS as published in the Washington Times article based on information from the Center for
Disease Control and Prevention.
- AIDS cased droped from 60,000 in 1997 to 48,000 in 1998.
- There were 6700 non I-V drug using cases of heterosexual patients with AIDS in 1998.
- Teenagers represented only 0.6 percent of cases in 97 & 98
- The number of AIDS babies went from 671 in 1996 to 473 in 1997 to 341 in 1998.
- Women infected with AIDS dropped from 13,000 in 1997 to 11,000 in 1998.
These decreasing numbers should be viewed in light of the fact that
there is no medical treatment or prevention that cures or prevents AIDS. Good common sense
has been the most effective method of prevention.