Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: AIDS and contemporary history
- I The pre-history of AIDS
- 1 AIDS and the regulation of sexuality
- 2 Public health doctors and AIDS as a public health issue
- 3 Politics and policy: historical perspectives on screening
- 4 Testing for a sexually transmissible disease, 1907–1970: the history of the Wassermann reaction
- 5 The politics of international co-ordination to combat sexually transmitted diseases, 1900–1980s
- 6 Hepatitis B as a model (and anti-model) for AIDS
- II AIDS as history
- Appendix AIDS: the archive potential
- Index
- Cambridge history of medicine
3 - Politics and policy: historical perspectives on screening
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: AIDS and contemporary history
- I The pre-history of AIDS
- 1 AIDS and the regulation of sexuality
- 2 Public health doctors and AIDS as a public health issue
- 3 Politics and policy: historical perspectives on screening
- 4 Testing for a sexually transmissible disease, 1907–1970: the history of the Wassermann reaction
- 5 The politics of international co-ordination to combat sexually transmitted diseases, 1900–1980s
- 6 Hepatitis B as a model (and anti-model) for AIDS
- II AIDS as history
- Appendix AIDS: the archive potential
- Index
- Cambridge history of medicine
Summary
Introduction
This paper grew out of the realisation that the governing context of my appraisal of contemporary AIDS policies was the historical material that I was dealing with in my research on tuberculosis policy and health education. The debates surrounding HIV serotesting had a deep resonance in the correspondence in the Public Record Office (PRO) files of the Ministry of Health dealing with policy formation on mass testing and health surveillance. Here too there was long, careful and critical consideration of the mandate and responsibility for the extension of routine health services into new territories. There was also concern at the Cabinet level about international co-operation in epidemiological data collection and the consequences of exclusionary immigration controls. I was struck too by the problems, both epistemological and practical, which the notion of ‘presymptomatic illness’ had posed for policy makers.
In saying this, I must, however, be cautious of the methodological trap of ‘presentism’; i.e. attempting to interpret past actions and actors in terms of the cognitive structures, analytical paradigms and critical agendas of the present. This is a particular danger for sociologists such as myself who look for the broader dynamics involved in policy changes over and above those which are situation specific. However, it would be overcautious in the extreme to fail to bring to the table of contemporary discussions the longer history of experience of creating preventive health programmes.
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- AIDS and Contemporary History , pp. 55 - 73Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993
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