Dubai Telegraph - 'Lucky to still be alive': Living with HIV for over 30 years

EUR -
AED 4.306273
AFN 77.383663
ALL 96.436312
AMD 447.301136
ANG 2.099207
AOA 1075.161802
ARS 1700.362176
AUD 1.773283
AWG 2.110459
AZN 1.990694
BAM 1.957582
BBD 2.362901
BDT 143.473659
BGN 1.956911
BHD 0.44205
BIF 3476.395101
BMD 1.172477
BND 1.514679
BOB 8.10669
BRL 6.474892
BSD 1.173193
BTN 105.848608
BWP 15.503575
BYN 3.442107
BYR 22980.554465
BZD 2.359538
CAD 1.615773
CDF 2654.488636
CHF 0.930965
CLF 0.02724
CLP 1068.607311
CNY 8.255705
CNH 8.247288
COP 4530.112147
CRC 584.544556
CUC 1.172477
CUP 31.070648
CVE 110.740403
CZK 24.353489
DJF 208.373063
DKK 7.47153
DOP 73.338506
DZD 152.075507
EGP 55.711664
ERN 17.587159
ETB 181.974686
FJD 2.687025
FKP 0.87569
GBP 0.876151
GEL 3.154102
GGP 0.87569
GHS 13.512803
GIP 0.87569
GMD 86.179501
GNF 10182.9649
GTQ 8.985371
GYD 245.452848
HKD 9.122119
HNL 30.695439
HRK 7.534694
HTG 153.653142
HUF 387.792754
IDR 19575.680476
ILS 3.762251
IMP 0.87569
INR 105.780958
IQD 1535.945222
IRR 49390.604928
ISK 148.024999
JEP 0.87569
JMD 187.714873
JOD 0.831253
JPY 182.450942
KES 151.131725
KGS 102.53368
KHR 4701.633502
KMF 493.612554
KPW 1055.222506
KRW 1730.764481
KWD 0.359834
KYD 0.97759
KZT 605.290977
LAK 25391.167702
LBP 104995.339736
LKR 362.980409
LRD 208.009094
LSL 19.621411
LTL 3.46202
LVL 0.70922
LYD 6.354679
MAD 10.757471
MDL 19.78501
MGA 5308.976711
MKD 61.575864
MMK 2462.269149
MNT 4159.48369
MOP 9.40312
MRU 46.617383
MUR 53.980847
MVR 18.126492
MWK 2037.766044
MXN 21.113972
MYR 4.788386
MZN 74.933015
NAD 19.62746
NGN 1709.330645
NIO 43.033988
NOK 11.913536
NPR 169.354158
NZD 2.030616
OMR 0.450719
PAB 1.173213
PEN 3.946589
PGK 4.982149
PHP 68.687224
PKR 328.58638
PLN 4.203801
PYG 7832.296492
QAR 4.269228
RON 5.090774
RSD 117.440326
RUB 93.706781
RWF 1702.436994
SAR 4.397752
SBD 9.544103
SCR 17.352346
SDG 705.247584
SEK 10.880841
SGD 1.512765
SHP 0.879662
SLE 28.25928
SLL 24586.26638
SOS 670.068055
SRD 45.349052
STD 24267.912238
STN 24.856518
SVC 10.265563
SYP 12965.682007
SZL 19.6274
THB 36.827995
TJS 10.834378
TMT 4.115395
TND 3.405454
TOP 2.823044
TRY 50.097258
TTD 7.96045
TWD 36.985761
TZS 2919.468831
UAH 49.551662
UGX 4190.904206
USD 1.172477
UYU 45.972828
UZS 14099.038756
VES 327.371366
VND 30865.464096
VUV 142.306971
WST 3.265015
XAF 656.554641
XAG 0.017948
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.168678
XCG 2.114325
XDR 0.814801
XOF 654.241743
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.577104
ZAR 19.62289
ZMK 10553.699481
ZMW 26.69032
ZWL 377.537202
  • RBGPF

    -1.7900

    80.22

    -2.23%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.7700

    76.39

    -1.01%

  • RELX

    0.0900

    40.65

    +0.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.29

    +0.13%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.28

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.4200

    48.29

    -0.87%

  • RYCEF

    0.6300

    15.4

    +4.09%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    77.63

    +0.57%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    90.61

    +0.83%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    57.04

    -0.23%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.43

    0%

  • BCE

    -0.3000

    22.85

    -1.31%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    12.8

    -0.08%

  • BP

    -1.1600

    33.31

    -3.48%

  • BCC

    1.4100

    77.7

    +1.81%

'Lucky to still be alive': Living with HIV for over 30 years
'Lucky to still be alive': Living with HIV for over 30 years / Photo: Diptendu DUTTA - AFP/File

'Lucky to still be alive': Living with HIV for over 30 years

When people were diagnosed with HIV more than three decades ago, it was considered a death sentence.

Text size:

But after suffering through discrimination, the loss of loved ones and brutal side effects from drugs, advances in treatment over the years have allowed millions to live with the virus.

To mark the 40th anniversary of the discovery of the virus that causes AIDS, AFP spoke to four long-term survivors about their experience.

- 'Stigma' remains -

Paul Kidd, a 59-year-old activist and lawyer who lives north of the Australian city of Melbourne, said he was first diagnosed with HIV in 1991 but had probably already had it for several years.

Although he asked for a test in 1986, he said his doctor advised against it because "at that time there were no treatments and the political climate was very bad for people with HIV, with open calls for us to be quarantined, criminalised or otherwise mistreated".

"My diagnosis was hard to accept but not really a surprise, as an ex-partner of mine had died of AIDS in 1988," he said.

"Many people I knew and loved died."

After his diagnosis, Kidd started on an antiretroviral drug called AZT, which he said "made me very sick" but which he credits with saving his life.

Now he takes just one daily pill with no side effects.

"One thing that hasn't changed much is HIV stigma," he said, particularly in some regions.

"Uganda and Ghana are going in a terrible direction, and people with HIV in Russia and Eastern Europe have a much harder life than I ever did," he said.

"I know I am lucky to still be alive and the volunteer work I do is my way of honouring the memory of those who aren't with us any more."

- 'A little miracle' -

Pascale Lassus, a 62-year-old retiree in the southwestern French city of Bayonne, said she unknowingly contracted HIV in 1984 from her then boyfriend.

She did not find out until a decade later, when she was tested after falling ill with bronchitis.

"I was stunned," she said.

"I had been living normally until then and my immune system went haywire."

Then her six-year-old daughter tested positive.

"The doctor told me she wouldn't make it through adolescence. I was totally devastated."

The only treatment available was AZT, which had "horrific" side effects, she said.

"I had to wake my daughter up at night because it had to be taken every four hours."

But a new three-drug regimen in 1995 changed things.

"Today, my daughter is 35 years old," she said.

"She was able to have a child who is HIV-negative -- a little miracle."

- 'An asterisk at best' -

Grissel Granados, a 36-year-old deputy director of a women-focused non-profit organisation, has had HIV all her life.

When she was born in Mexico in 1986, her mother required an emergency Caesarean section, contracting HIV during a blood transfusion.

Her mother then "unknowingly breastfed me and that's how I acquired HIV", said Granados, who now lives in Los Angeles.

It wasn't until five years later, "when my dad started getting sick" that the family learned it had HIV, she said.

Her father died shortly after being diagnosed. Her mother was pregnant at the time but was advised not to breastfeed.

"So my sister, thankfully, is HIV-negative," Granados said.

Despite getting cancer at the age of 10, Granados said she "has had a very healthy life".

But she feels that people who have had HIV since birth are too often forgotten or ignored.

"We're an asterisk at best. For the most part, we are not represented in the history of long HIV," she said.

- 'Discriminated against' -

Joel Vermont, a 58-year-old living in the eastern suburbs of Paris, found out he had HIV in 1992.

"I was 27. It felt like being hit by a falling building," he said.

When he started on AZT, the "abominable" side effects led to him losing nearly 30 kilograms (65 pounds).

Then the new three-drug regimen "didn't work on me".

"I switched to alcohol," he said.

"My viral load exploded. I developed lung disease and early-onset cancer.

"I ended up in hospital, where I was in a coma for 45 days. When I woke up, I couldn't walk and I was paralysed in one arm."

After being "discriminated against" at work, he spent eight years on sick leave before winning a court case.

"For years, I heard I was going to die. Then all of a sudden I was told that I had to live," he said.

"I needed psychological support to accept that."

G.Gopalakrishnan--DT