On Thursday, protests by the country’s leading HIV/AIDS activists over the mandatory quarantines imposed on health care workers returning from the frontlines of the Ebola epidemic in West Africa are set to hit a boiling point.
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Led by ACT UP (the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power), activists will march from Bellevue Hospital, where U.S. Ebola patient Dr. Craig Spencer is currently being treated, to New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s office, as they demand that New York, New Jersey, and other states overturn all Ebola policies that are not supported by science.
“These are policies that are based in polemics to garner additional votes in upcoming elections and to appease a hysterical electorate,” said ACT UP co-founder Eric Sawyer, pointing to both the 2014 midterms, as well as Christie’s rumored presidential ambitions.
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Though Christie and Cuomo loosened their initial hardline demands, both governors have held strong to their policy of 21-day quarantines for health care workers who have treated Ebola patients – even if they have no symptoms of the virus. Years of medical research shows that Ebola is not transmitted before symptoms occur. And when symptoms first appear in the body, viral load is generally very low and sometimes even undetectable. President Barack Obama and leading health officials have criticized the mandatory quarantines.
ACT UP gathered at New York City’s LGBT Community Center on Monday to lay out its list of demands for Thursday’s protest. They are: the immediate lifting of mandatory quarantines and travel bans; declaring that all U.S. hospitals be deemed sanctuaries where undocumented immigrants can receive care; support for all health workers and increased U.S. funding to fight Ebola in West Africa; and an end to stigmatizing sick Ebola patients.
Working slogan ideas for posters include “Doctors are Not Criminals – Support Health Workers,” “Cuomo and Christie: Dumb and Dumber,” and “The Politics of Fear Only Fuels Ebola.”
“What the U.S. government needs is easy to understand, scientifically based information about the transmission of the Ebola virus,” Sawyer said. “You can only get Ebola with direct contact of people who are symptomatic from their bodily fluids, and you can’t get it from sitting next to someone who is African or the handle of a subway car.”
For long-term activists and HIV survivors like Sawyer, these policies indicate that not much has changed in the more than 30 years since HIV/AIDS became pandemic in the U.S. The result has been a national mobilization of HIV/AIDS activists, who in advance of Thursday’s protest have written strongly-worded letters to both governors.
Experienced in pandemic response, the activists argue that vitriol and opportunism are once again the U.S. government’s trump cards in its approach to disease response. As the HIV virus spread rapidly in the 1980s, politicians in power called for what are now perceived to be draconian measures, including a travel and immigration ban that remained in place until the Obama administration, and sought to keep all people with HIV out of the country. Similar bans are now being explored for Ebola patients.
“This ill-informed U.S.-crafted policy was replicated by over 140 countries around the world in an attempt to wall HIV away from their people,” Sawyer said. “The 32 million people that died of AIDS and the over 30 million people currently living with HIV taught us how well stigma fueled-attempts to quarantine the sick from the healthy worked.”
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From these bans to quarantines, calls for isolation only further served to stigmatize those living with HIV at a time when workplace, housing, and health care discrimination were prevalent. Funeral homes were even hesitant to handle the bodies of the dying, according to Jeremiah Johnson, HIV Prevention Research and Policy Coordinator at the Treatment Action Group (TAG).









