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Miami Herald (USA), July 19, 2004
American Women Leave AIDS Conference
Angry
Three South Florida women came
back from the world AIDS conference in Bangkok
full of bitterness at what they see as Washington's
misplaced priorities.
BANGKOK, Thailand -- They had come seeking science,
new medicines, ways of sharing what they knew
with people from other countries.
But what the three South Florida women who journeyed
here to attend the XV International AIDS Conference
came away with was far more emotional. They
left impassioned, angry with their country,
rueful, determined and cynical at once, demanding
change, doubting it can happen. They bonded
instantly.
Sheri Kaplan runs the Center for Positive Connections
in North Miami, an AIDS clinic she started
after being diagnosed with HIV in 1994 from
hetreosexual sex.
Kim Saiswick is a nurse and the outreach director
for Holy Cross Hospital in Fort Lauderdale,
working with low-income AIDS patients.
Toye Brewer is an assistant professor of clinical
medicine at the University of Miami School
of Medicine, presenting a poster here on drug-using
gay and bisexual men in South Beach and Miami
clubs.
Here are some of their thoughts after attending
the conference:
Kaplan: ''I love the demonstrators. They brought
the stigma and the suffering to the forefront.
It made a difference.''
Saiswick: ''The U.S. is spending all its money
in the wrong places. Killing people in Iraq.
We're making war there when the war we should
be fighting is here. A war we could win. Our
priorities are all wrong.''
Brewer:''This meeting wasn't about science. It
was about the world struggle between the haves
and the have-nots. People dying miserable deaths
when we could save them by spending $1 a day
on medicine.''
Saiswick:''After the last conference (in Barcelona
in 2002) the drug companies lowered the price
of their drugs.''
Brewer: ''Right. Why does the U.S. want people
to respect drug patents when so many people
are dying. Aren't human lives more important?
People are saying they want care, they need
care. We aren't spending our money right.''
Kaplan:'It was so emotional to go to the People
With AIDS Lounge (Kaplan is HIV-positive, and
so welcome there), and talk to the people.
They see how healthy I am and they ask, 'How
do you do it?' '' Kaplan has remained healthy
with HIV for 10 years by using natural methods
to build up her immune system. ''I hear them
talk about the shame and stigma at home.''
Brewer: ''I tell patients back home how lucky
they are to have the drugs they do. I've had
patients down to 90 pounds, with diarrhea 24
hours a day. And six months later they're smiling,
going back to work. I tell them 95 percent
of people in the world are forced to die because
they can't get them. They have no idea.''
Saiswick: ''You tell people you're a nurse and
they drain you dry -- they ask about everything
you know. There are so many things we know
about that they don't in other countries.''
Brewer:''This will affect my practice. It's not
just prescribing drugs. It has really heightened
my compassion.''
Saiswick: ''We just have to keep fighting.''
Brewer:''To see ourselves as a global village.''
Kaplan:''It's all one world. We have to unite
and share. It's made me very emotional.''
<< The Miami Herald -- 7/19/04 >>
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