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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 157

In support of these ideas we cite the following excerpt from the research paper titled "The Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome in Haiti":
"The recognition of Kaposi’s sarcoma and opportunistic infections in Haiti was temporally related to the appearance of AIDS in the United States. The earliest possible case of opportunistic infection in Haiti that is known to our group occurred in July 1978, and the first case of fulminant Kaposi’s sarcoma was diagnosed in June 1979. The first cases of Kaposi’s sarcoma and opportunistic infections in homosexual men in the United States were documented in early 1978. We do not believe that AIDS was present in Haiti before 1978. This contention is supported by the clinical experience of the practicing pathologists and dermatologists in Haiti and by our inability to identify earlier cases through examination of autopsy and biopsy records."8
3. Why are prostitutes and promiscuous men the next
high-risk group?
It is because they are exposed to frequent venereal infections and therefore prone to frequent courses of antibiotics.
4. Why is there an explosion of AIDS in Africa?
For the last ten to fifteen years, epidemics of syphilis and gonorrhea have affected unprecedented numbers of people in Africa. In the African countries it is often difficult to collect accurate data because many of these cases are either not reported or are "self-treated" with over-the-counter antibiotics. Despite this under-reporting, there are several countries in Africa where syphilis and gonococcal infections rank first or second in incidence among all infectious diseases. Furthermore, the number of people with sexually transmitted diseases is greater than all other infectious disease cases put together. This is startling information considering these countries have a great number of infectious diseases such as malaria, measles, parasitic infections, etc. The statistics of the World Health Organization (WHO) show that this is, in fact, the case in such countries as Botswana, French Territory of the Affars and Issas, Guinea-Bissau, Reunion, Senegal, Uganda, Gambia, Guinea, Lesotho, Mali, Mauritius, Morocco and the Seychelles.9. 10
That congenital syphilis is so prevalent in these countries is also suggestive of the enormous venereal disease epidemic prevalent in Africa at the moment. The treatment of such diseases in Africa is far from standardized. Many of the local