As a logical conclusion to the preceding chapters, one can say that the state of AIDS has come about primarily because of the very treatment these individuals received for their frequent venereal infections.
Jaffe and colleagues reported that in case studies of homo¬sexuals with AIDS, eighty-six percent had a history of gonorrhea and sixty-eight percent a history of syphilis.1
Yet these figures do not tell the whole story, since those suffering from asymptomatic gonococcal infections as well as pharyngeal gonococcal infections were not accounted for in the statistics. Since these cases comprise a large percentage of the total number of those infected with venereal diseases, the numbers given above would be much higher if they included these infections as well.
This point is exemplified in a study of homosexuals done in Los Angeles by Merino and Richards, where it was found that up to 70% of patients with anal gonococcal infections and 90% of patients with pharyngeal gonococcal infections were asymptomatic.2
A likely explanation is that after having a casual sexual contact, many homosexuals through their own initiative took antibiotics as a prophylactic measure in case they had contracted a venereal disease. If they had indeed contracted any venereal disease, what they were in effect doing was masking the symptoms by taking the antibiotics, and not really eliminating the pathogenic microorganism, fit is very unlikely that these individuals would have reported such incidents since it was probably too frequent an occurrence with them because of their lifestyle.) S. Landis, in a paper summarizing the occurrence of sexually transmitted diseases in Canada and the frequency of gonococcal infections within the homosexual population, sug-