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The
AIDS Numbers Racket:
Chapter
37
National
Review, October 14, 1988
Copyright 1988 by National Review

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Andy
Warhol didn't just say
that in the future
everyone would be famous
for 15 minutes. By making
his own fame ride on giant
paintings of Campbell's
Soup cans, he proved it.
It is now the future, and
with Roper polls
indicating that no
magazine and newspaper
articles are read by more
of the public than those
on AIDS, the ticket to
that promised quarter-hour
is most cheaply bought by
proclamations of fresh
news about that discase.
Especially bad news. |
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Messrs.
Kevin Hopkins and William
Johnston, both researchers at the
Indianapolis-based Hudson
Institute, have caught the eye of
the media by criticizing the
Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
estimate regarding the number of
Americans infected with the AIDS
virus (HIV). The Hudson report,
which was endorsed by President
Reagan's former science advisor
Dr. George A. Keyworth, suggests
that from 1.9 million to three
million Americans were infected
with the AIDS virus by the end of
1987, more than twice the CDC
estimate of 945,000 to 1.4
million. The report also argues
that the total includes 200,000 to
500,000 heterosexuals who are not
intravenousdrug abusers (IVDAs),
many times the official estimate.
Scary
stuff, to be sure. And the media
dutifully reported the bottomline
figures, without going into the
theory behind them.
In
this case it must be conceded that
the media weren't given much
theory to work with. Instead, most
of the Hudson report is devoted
not to explaining its own
calculations but to criticizing
other theories. It notes,
correctly, that single theory yet
offered can deduce anything near
an exact estimate of nationwide
seroprevalence. All are skewed in
some direction or another, and
attempts to compensate only amount
to sophisticated guessing. But the
theories they criticize at least
provide a basis on which they can
be evaluated, and on which their
numbers can be recalculated using
other variables.
By
contrast, the Hudson theory is
what mathematicians call
"black boxing" –
throwing numbers into a box and
pulling out whichever ones are
suitable.
The
authors' method of figuring total
infections has two parts. First,
they calculate backward to find
out how many people were infected
by 1984. By using the present
number of AIDS cases and the rate
at which infections progress to
AIDS, one may estimate how many
infections there were a few years
ago. (An estimate for any time
more recent than 1984 or 1985
really isn't possible since almost
no infections develop into AIDS in
the first two years.)
This
approach is straightforward. It is
like deducing ftom a car's current
position and a knowledge of its
rate of speed – say, sixty miles
an hour that an hour earlier it
was sixty miles further back on
the highway.
What
makes its application to
seropositivity estimation
difficult is that: 1) no one knows
exactly how many AIDS cases there
have been (the CDC has estimated
that under-reporting could hide as
many as 20 per cent of cases), and
2) the progression rate isn't
etched in stone either, although
several studies seem to have
formed a fairly strong consensus.
(The report offers a table, which
happens to be correct, based on an
average of four studies. It shows
cumulative rates of 3 per cent at
three years, 20 per cent at six
years, and 45 per cent at nine
years, meaning that at nine years
after infection we can expect 45
per cent of seropositives to have
developed AIDS.)
Unfortunately,
the authors are more than a little
confused. At first they state
(correctly) that "if the
assumed rate of progression is
faster than the actual rate, then
the predicted number of HIV
infections will be lower than it
actually is."
Thus,
if the assumption that our
hypothetical car was going sixty
proves false and indeed it was
only going thirty, then its
starting position wasn't sixty
miles back, it was only thirty.
Yet later the authors state that
"the more severe the
underestimate of the progression
rate , the greater the number of
historical infections there will
be." This is the opposite of
what they earlier stated and the
opposite of the truth. It could be
that they are confusing
progression rate with median
incubation time of the virus
(shown by the table referred to
above as slightly over nine
years), which has been repeatedly
underestimated.
Since
they don't bother to show their
calculations, we can't be sure
which formula they used, but it
appears to be the latter. Thus the
basis for the figure which the
Hudson report uses to show
infections as of 1984 – as high
as 1,220,000-is fatally flawed.
By
contrast, Dr. Joel Hay, a senior
research fellow at the Hoover
Institution, has used progression
calculation to establish only
about 700,000 infections as of
1988.
Having
established (incorrectly) a figure
for infections as of 1984, the
Hudson report thence seeks to
establish how widely the epidemic
has spread since. We are given the
results of three scenarios, which
estimate the spread as being
anywhere from several hundred
thousand infections to over two
million. Yet we are given
absolutely no information about
what those scenarios consist of.
For all we know, they are sheer
guesswork.
One
cannot directly attack such
ghostly assertions, yet it can be
stated that all three, including
the alleged "best case"
for which the other two cases
serve as foils, may be based on a
fallacious assumption – that the
epidemic is necessarily spreading
at all. Continual sample blood
testing among high-risk groups
suggests that rates of new
infections are extremely low;
studies in San Francisco show less
than 1 per cent yearly among
homosexuals and 2 to 3 per cent
among IVDAs. This, combined with
attrition caused by AIDS deaths as
well as non-AIDS-related deaths
among infected persons, means the
overall percentage of the
population that is infected may be
holding still or even dropping.
In
fact, testing of military recruits
and first-time blood donors has
shown no increase in infections
over the last two years. While
it's true that these groups are
not fully representative of the
general population, the
self-selection factors that make
them different can be assumed to
be constant, and therefore there's
no reason to think that a
significant overall increase in
seropositivity would not also show
up in their ranks.
Support
for the estimated 200,000 to
500,000 non-IVDA infected
heterosexuals is no less sketchy.
Cited approvingly are such sources
as Masters and Johnson, whose
survey sample we are told
"was carefully
selected," notwithstanding
that their sample methodology was
so haphazard as to draw comparison
to Shere Hite's.
Cited
also is a study conducted by a
sexually transmitted disease (STD)
clinic in Baltimore showing high
seropositivity among non-IVDA
heterosexuals. We are not told
that this study gave the highest
rate of any such study in the
nation (which is why it is the
only one the Hudson report
bothered to cite) or that it is
the only such study where tested
individuals were not reinterviewed
upon being shown to be infected.
(The importance of re-interviewing
is that people will initially deny
taboo practices such as homosexual
acts and drug abuse until they are
informed that they are infected,
and are thereupon questioned by a
well-trained, sympathetic
interviewer. New York City
officials have found that
two-thirds of seropositive men
initially claiming that their only
high-risk activity is patronizing
prostitutes will, upon
re-interview, confess to either
homosexual acts or drug abuse.)
Even
with these false authorities there
is no attempt to apply any of the
data directly. They are simply
listed in the body of the report
as a select hodgepodge of studies.
Ignored are such authoritative
studies as that of the New York
City Department of Health which
concluded, "In the city with
the world's highest reported
incidence of AIDS, these results
suggest that HIV infection was
primarily limited to known
AIDS-risk-group members and their
sexual partners."
The
tiny percentage of non-IVDA
heterosexuals being detected in
military and blood-bank testing
– an estimated two per ten
thousand and six per hundred
thousand respectively – also
directly contradicts the Hudson
estimate that as many as one in
three hundred non-IVDA
heterosexuals is infected. Such
massive numbers of heterosexuals
walking around unknowingly
infected would surely be showing
up in blood sampling; they are
not.
The
Hudson Institute report is nothing
more than pre-determined
conclusions and free-floating
speculations presented as science.
Alas, to those who have neither
the time nor the expertise to pore
over the Hudson material and
discover this for themselves, it
is cause for neither derision nor
humor but for fear. The plague of
hysteria continues to spread.
Read
Michael Fumento’s additional
work on AIDS
and on the
media. Read an excerpt from
his book, The Myth of
Heterosexual AIDS, Exploding
Myths (National Review,
December 13, 1993).
Michael
Fumento is a health and science
writer who has authored four
books, including The
Fat of the Land: Our Health Crisis
and How Overweight Americans Can
Help Themselves
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