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The
African AIDS Epidemic: A History by John Illife
Reviewed
by Rene Loewenson
Extracted from
Pambazuka News 257
June 01, 2006
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/books/34795
More than twenty years
into the AIDS epidemic in Africa we continue to struggle with its scale
and tragic consequences. In a continent where, according to UNAIDS and
WHO in 2005, up to 28,9 million adults and children were living with HIV
and AIDS, we continue to fail to prevent infection in young people, to
leave many who need it without access to treatment and to rely heavily
on poor households for care and support. In 2005 alone on the continent
there were about 3 million people newly infected and 2,5 million adult
and child deaths due to AIDS.
So what can we learn from the history of the epidemic that will help us
change this unacceptable loss of life and wellbeing?
John Illife’s book claims ‘modesty’ in outlining the history of the AIDS
epidemic in Africa based on accessible, published literature. He discusses
the still contentious first origins of the epidemic and maps the spread
of HIV across the major regions of the continent. He traces the epidemic
through conditions such as Tuberculosis and Kaposi’s sarcoma, that marked
the path of the virus. The book cautions against over-simplifying the
conditions that lead to the spread of HIV infection. For example, he describes
how areas of the Democratic Republic of Congo, affected by war and violence,
had low rates of HIV infection due to isolation and reduced mobility,
preventing the linking of sexual networks. At the same time economic opportunities
in more stable societies led to mobility and urbanisation that provided
channels for the spread of HIV infection.
His presentation of the international, national and local response to
the epidemic in the 1980s and 1990s describes both the inadequacy of the
international response, the burnout and collapse of morale of families
and medical professionals, and the courage and focus given to the response
from centres like TASO and individuals like Elly Katabira in Uganda. The
book traces the maturing of the epidemic in the late 1990s, both in the
falling off of HIV prevalence in some parts of Africa, and the growing
pressure for access to treatment from communities on the continent.
Illife proposes that history teaches us some lessons about the epidemic
and our response to it. The first new cases in Africa were early, in the
late 1950s, and the disease spread through commercial and population movements
before the disease was known or recognised. By the 1980s when it was recognised,
after some initial resistance internationally and within the continent,
it was already rooted within the population at epidemic levels. He argues
that this deprived the continent of the opportunity to intervene in the
earliest stages of the epidemic, and is a fundamental reason for the depth
of the epidemic on the continent. Illife describes how the response to
the epidemic was confounded by economic, social and gender inequities
and diverse and contradictory understandings of the epidemic, from medical
and scientific analyses to those drawn from religious and traditional
morality and political perceptions.
The evolution of AIDS, under the intense scrutiny of medical and social
science and in a period of growth of global communication, does make this
epidemic unique both for the way it is understood and for the responses
to it. Many of these lessons on the epidemic and the responses to it have
been learned from Africa. The book by Illife adds further useful evidence
to this learning and places the epidemic in a historical perspective.
And yet, despite this growing body of evidence, African households continue
to take on a significant burden of the response to AIDS. Only recently
have meaningful resources for treatment begun to flow to Africa and the
policies and resources to prevent HIV infection remain inadequate. How
can history assist to understand a global inequity of this scale? Surely
this calls for a deeper political economy analysis of the historical facts
that Iliffe presents?
Let’s take one example of this political economy: The book hints at the
corporate economic, social and political interests that shaped responses
to the epidemic. It gives less evidence on the structural adjustment policies
that spread through Africa at the same time as the epidemic. In the 1980s,
when countries were competing for foreign investment under liberalisation
policies, public health reason was overshadowed by economic imperative.
Even as AIDS was recognised and diagnosed, economic policies cut spending
on the interventions and systems to prevent and treat it, with falling
access to public health services, and especially primary health care outreach
in low income communities. Policies that increased the economic and social
determinants for HIV, such as mass retrenchment, flexible and insecure
employment, inadequate housing and unsafe community environments with
privatising essential services could not be questioned. The change being
produced by AIDS was subject to a much more powerful change agenda: a
penetration of ‘free’ market policies, efficiency driven social policies
and liberalised production that left families and communities on the margins
of their own national economies, producing what they did not consume,
not able to afford what they did not produce, susceptible to the risk
of HIV and vulnerable to the impact of AIDS.
Public health evidence on AIDS at the time was interesting, sometimes
alarming, but not decisive. If in the 1980s the full devastating reality
of the evidence cited in the book of 13 million AIDS related deaths and
12 million orphans due to AIDS were really given recognition, would there
not have been some rethink about the scale and pace of this market reform,
its associated collapse of solidarity and exposure to poverty? Perhaps
it was not simply the quiet spread of the virus through our populations
in the 1970s that made the epidemic in Africa so profound. It was also
in the 1980s the massive block placed by dominant neoliberal free market
policies to the universal, solidarity based comprehensive social protection,
health and employment policies that were needed to respond to HIV and
AIDS.
Iliffe is correct at the end of the book that the long incubation period
of the epidemic has provided grounds for a new form of organising: that
of patients for their own treatment. The actions of social movements and
some states have brought back onto the agenda issues of solidarity and
universal access to health care and access to treatment at a global level.
Pointing to the maturing of the epidemic, Iliffe ends on a note of optimism
that ‘the virus no longer holds the initiative that explained its success’.
If however it is indeed our own political, economic and social institutions
and policies that we must confront to take control over HIV and AIDS,
then a more pertinent lesson from history may be the one captured on the
front cover of the book, in the hands of a person holding a poster saying
‘Stand up for your rights’.
* Rene Loewenson is Programme Manager for Equinet, the Regional Network
on Equity in Health in Southern Africa
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