"The social welfare response to HIV/AIDS was, and remains fundamentally inadequate". Discuss

Authors Avatar

“The social welfare response to HIV/AIDS was, and remains fundamentally inadequate". Discuss

        The first official case of AIDS in Britain was recorded in 1983 but nurses said they were caring for unofficial cases before [Ferlie and Pettigrew 1990:195]. Similar to America early reports were confined to the homosexual population. When looking at initial attitudes to the disease if we look at the statement provided by Day and Klein the confused nature of the debate comes to light." The AIDS epidemic is defined as a case study of the Government forced to cope with uncertainty, moral ambiguity and knowledge that there are no solutions, only ways of limiting damage." [Day and Klein 1989:337]. To return to the initial question, social welfare concerns the social services response in relation to the benefits given to groups of society affected by the epidemic. Watney states "it important to consider the full significance of the Governments continuing failure to support community based health education and care among the social groups most severely affected by HIV disease since 1981". [Watney 1991:4]. By this he is saying that his belief is that the Government has failed groups in society on social welfare issues of HIV/AIDS up to 1991 when the journal was written but views come from him being a homosexual activist. Controversially, on the other extreme, the conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher who in 1988 tackled the whole problems of AIDS (not just specific aspects like social welfare) at 'Prime Ministers Questions' and said; "I think we got it just about right" (Williams 1999:132). This for me seems to relate to the idea that the social welfare extreme in care of the debate beyond the NHS might not be as much as a high priority for the Government and would take a different angle on addressing HIV/AIDS policy looking at prevention and research. In general, dealing with the debate has been characterized as walking on 'social egg shells' because there are so many moral arguments enclosed in the debate. When discussing this essay I have broken down periods of responses to be able to appropriately draw conclusions from the initial responses and where we are today. These periods shall be 1981-1985 with the initial responses, some of the 1986-1989 actions including the activities of a Select Cabinet Committee, the 1990- 1995 legislation for giving sufferers more equal rights and finally to the present day, mainly looking at the conclusions from the All Party Political Group on AIDS. The discussion will respond to ideas that direct social welfare is inadequate; also whether other types of response were adequate such as indirect social welfare and investigating political and social implications on why certain action was not appropriate.

        As stated earlier the first documented case of AIDS in Britain occurred in 1983. At this point there wasn't very much known about the disease, nor was it to be known what the extent was going to be. "The initial phase of the disease in early 1980's is characterized as one of official neglect. AIDS was seen as an illness confined to marginal groups in society such as drug users, hemophiliacs and above all gay men" [Williams 1999:65]. There are a number of opinions that could have been taken on this issue but it seems that it could be taking a view of HIV/AIDS based on "secular individualism, that it is just another disease, albeit a new and dangerous one" [Goss and Smith 1996:78]. On the other hand, the constant reference does need to go back to the fact that the disease was against marginal groups and discriminated against and was not appropriately acted upon. However, the Griffiths Report in 1983 stating "the NHS needs the ability to move much more quickly for any medical problem" [Ferlie and Pettigrew 1990:197] relates to the principle that the slow response could simply be due to systems failure and not prejudice or discrimination. A politician, the media or public opinion need to highlight the problem to speed up policy, which was not the case. Today we have the benefit of hindsight and the NHS can react more quickly in response, but the surprise of such this HIV/AIDS problem and the sensitivity of the debate highlight the difficulties that arose and must still arise in making an appropriate policy. However, sufferers were still cared for in hospitals at this time (even if not that effectively), for free, so there was basic social welfare responses that many other countries did not and still do not offer.

Join now!

        In 1985, British AIDS cases got to 250, which was a growth similar to US. There was a cross over into heterosexuals. [Garfield 1996:108]. With this in mind the debate started to become more complex. "A distinction is also highly relevant when considering the signals the Government was receiving, was it dealing with a gay plague (i.e. something affecting only a minority, and a stigmatized one at that) or was it dealing with a threat to the lives of the whole population" (Day and Klein 1989:341). The debate really intensified. Thatcher's belief was that HIV/AIDS was a small problem and ...

This is a preview of the whole essay