Remembering 1981 - Learnings from the past
It has now been forty years since the CDC bulletin Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) described cases of a rare lung infection in five gay men in Los Angeles. This was the first official report of what would become known as AIDS – Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. What reactions did the first reports of a strange, new disease generate – amongst medical researchers and doctors, in the gay community, and in the public at large? What can we learn from the past to meet the challenges of the future? In this theme, we have collected film clips from the archive, documentaries and essays on the HIV and AIDS pandemic.
"Little did we know" – A look back at the first AIDS report with Dr. James Curran
Voices about the early years
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She had a story on a new, unpleasant disease.
Nobody wanted to publish it. In the Swedish journal Läkemedelsvärlden (2011) journalist Inger Atterstam tells about when she wasn’t allowed to write about AIDS. (Only in Swedish.)
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Reflections on 35 Years of AIDS
Anthony S. Fauci (at the time NIAID Director) looks back at the first reports of AIDS in 1981 and offers perspective on advances in treatment for HIV infection.
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Life Before the Lifeboat
AIDS pioneering physician Paul Volberding in conversations with some of San Francisco's courageous leaders from the earliest days of the AIDS epidemic.
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First AIDS Patients Diagnosed 35 Years Ago
On June 5, 1981, the CDC published the first documentation of AIDS. Treatments have been developed over the years but there is still no cure.