Increasing concern: AIDS/HIV
1972-2008 AD
My first encounter with an AIDS
patient was in the year 1972, when I was in charge of a forty-seven bed
pediatric unit, in a relatively new hospital wing. I listened silently, as several
doctors discussed the nature of the illness of a young, male child. He was not
expected to live long, because none of the medical treatments that they had
prescribed for him seemed to be effective.
In fact, the child was becoming
worse day by day. No one seemed to know the actual cause of his illness and it
appeared that no one knew how to treat him effectively. What the doctors did
know was that the child's immune system was not responding to the medications
that they had given him. They had made various attempts to seek advice from
other, well known physicians, but nothing that they had recommended seemed to
be working.
I was stunned, as I began to
realize the serious nature of what the doctors where stating, with such hushed
voices.
Not long after that, I became
aware that more children were coming into the hospital diagnosed with
auto-
immune deficiency, as well.
My next encounter with AIDS,
was approximately ten years later, when I attended as series of seminars in Florida . By then, it was
becoming known by doctors all around the world, that AIDS was becoming more and
more of a global concern. There was still no treatment for the illness. The
doctors who attended these seminars came from the east and west, north and
south. All of them agreed on the fact that the causes of AIDS were becoming
increasingly apparent, but nothing was definite yet, in terms of treatment or a
cure.
What was causing HIV/AIDS?
First, there was the
transfusion factor. The second factor was the reality that doctors from all over the world, were over-prescribing
medication. The third factor involved sexual activity, without proper
protection.
All three of these causes
appeared to be contributing to the spread of the illness known as AIDS. They
had one thing in common and that was the reality that they were causing the
immune system of the human body to shut down. When the immune system does not
respond, AIDS was going to be the inevitable result.
I was stunned, alarmed and concerned
because people everywhere were told that there was no cause for alarm.
Supposedly, AIDS was not contagious, or spread by kissing, hand contact,
sneezing or coughing. People where being advised to live their lives as they
normally would and not to be concerned about the possibility of a global
epidemic or pandemic.
Finding some way to trigger the
immune system to respond, became one focus of the seminars. How could this be
treated?
One of the classic examples of
an immune system response was what happened when cowpox was used in the
immunization for smallpox. The human body's immune system would respond in a
positive way, when a person was vaccinated with cowpox vaccine. This would give
the person protection from smallpox.
Everyone felt that there had to be other
ways that the immune system could be triggered to respond to the AIDS virus.
Now, in the year 2008, it has
become increasingly apparent that the AIDS virus is not one that has been
contained.
We have watched scenarios where
there are hundreds of babies born to deceased parents who died of AIDS, even in
North America . In Africa
alone, there are more cases of AIDS than anyone can count. These are estimated
to be in the millions. Every country in the world has been affected to some
degree.
It is not as if the population
of the world is unaware of the illness, or as if attempts have not been made on
a global level, to contain the AIDS virus. Increasing numbers of benefits are
held annually to try to raise research money for this cause. There are some
treatments which appear to be working, at least to some extent.
The question remains, "Has
the answer been found?"
To this timely question, one
must reply, "Not yet, even though it appears that there are major advances
have been made in terms of medical research."
Is there another answer?
I Heard A Sigh
I heard a sigh upon the wind,
"Yes, God is good, but man has sinned."
"Yes, God is good, but man has sinned."
"Forgive all man,"
was my reply
And then I heard another sigh.
And then I heard another sigh.
"Cry out for children
everywhere,
Those lost, alone, in deep despair."
Those lost, alone, in deep despair."
The wind, it sighed; it knew I
heard,
As if delivered was the word.
As if delivered was the word.
Another wind, another day,
The sigh for children seems to stay.
The sigh for children seems to stay.
The sigh for love upon the
wind;
The sigh to say, "All man has sinned."
The sigh to say, "All man has sinned."
The sigh to plead but for God's
grace,
In ev'ry era, time and place;
In ev'ry era, time and place;
The sigh for children, young
and old.
Those hurt and hungry, in the cold.
The sigh for peace and end to war;
The sigh goes on forever more.
Those hurt and hungry, in the cold.
The sigh for peace and end to war;
The sigh goes on forever more.
The sighing wind will come and
go
Lest we forget our love to show.
Lest we forget our love to show.

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