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Long-term
Survival
By Michael Callen
Talk Symposium Amsterdam 1992
I want
to make one thing clear about what I'm going to say about long-term
survivors: I'm not a scientist, I do not represent these to
be scientific. You might think as the Monet of AIDS: I will
give you impressions. I think they are worth something, but
for those you blue-suited people who want to see the data, all
I have to offer is what I learned to actual long-term survivors,
and I basicly asked them in their own words why they thought
they had survived and I covered a broad range of possible reasons
and some patterns emerged.
Long term survival:
first thing to say is that we exist. You might not know it if you
relied for your information on mainstream media. According to the
US government statistics - which you can believe or not, they are
not very well kept, but they are all we have - at least in the US
9% of people with full blown AIDS live 3 years or more, and 5% live
5 years or more. Unfortunately, there have not been significent
improvements in median survival since I was diagnosed in 1982. The
life expectancy of a person with AIDS has only been extended by
6 months. I personally believe that that 6 months is attributable
to our ability to prevent pneumocystis pneumonia, the number one
killer of people with AIDS.
The first thing
I want to say about long-term survivors is that there definitely
is a survivor personality. But for every pattern I found, I found
exceptions. And that actually made me very happy, because it says
to me that there is no single way, there is no recipe, no magic
way to become a long-term survivor. I personally believe that each
person's AIDS is unique, is different. They probably arrived in
it in a slightly different way. We are each bio-chemicaly, biologically,
gentically unique. And so I never expected that any one approach
would work for everybody with AIDS. But I do found the patterns
that I found fascinating and I will provide them to you.
If I had to
summarize in one word the common characteristic among survivors,
it would be 'grit': people are incredibly feisty, incredibly knowledgable,
not at all passive, very aggressively involved in the struggle to
survive.
They spoke
very passionately of what they referred to as 'healing partnerships
with their health-care providers', by which they meant that they
respected the opinions and expertise of the various health-care
providors that they sought out, but they did not do something simply
because they were told to do something. In every instance, they
wanted to know what their options were, they wanted to know what
the possible side-effects were, and they had worked out relationships
with their health-care providors that permitted a dialogue to go
back and forth. And in fact, one's relationship with one's doctor
is probably the most important relationship that you have, with
the possible exception of your lover, when you have AIDS. And it
is a lot like having a lover: it involves fighting, and being honest
about your emotions, and talking. And the long-term survivors that
I interviewed were very eloquent about how they had worked over
years to achieve a really open wonderful relationship with their
health-care providers.
Every long-term
survivor mentioned the phrase 'major life-style changes'. That meant
the obvious: it meant that they immediately started practicing safe-sex,
to avoid exposure to other possible co-infectious factors. Most
of them gave up drugs and alcohol, although some of them not entirely.
Also, among
lifestyle changes: a lot of people had dabbled with diet changes,
but in almost no instance had anyone been able to persist in a radical
diet change.
Everybody talked
about, among lifestyle changes, what they called 'emotional house
cleaning', usually after they had survived their first major opportunistic
infection. It represented a crisis to them, and they did some soul
searching. They went through their relationships and they either
repaired them or they ended them. They spoke generally about needing
to get rid of people in their lives who refused to support them
in their belief that they could survive well beyond statistical
projections.
I don't know
whether it's true here, but in America Elizabeth Kubler-Ross is
very popular and everybody is an instant expert on dying. And there
are five stages, and people will constantly treat you as if you
are in one of the stages, usually denial. If you talk about maybe
sticking around longer than the 18 months allotted to you. People
will look at you and say 'yeah, sure !' But long-term survivors
were militant about it; they simply wouldn't put up with it. They
spoke very movingly about needing to surround themselves with people
who would support them in their hope.
Interestingly,
another thing that everyone mentioned was that knowledge of another
long-term survivor was crucial to maintaining their own belief in
long-term survival. And that's really not so mysterious, when you
stop to think about it. If you set out to do something that no human
has ever done, it's a different experience than if you set out to
do something that few humans have done. You know that it can be
done.
The most surprising
finding among my sample of long-term survivors was a clear rebirth
of spirituallity. With two exceptions - me and one other guy - all
the long-term survivors talked about taking great comfort from their
spiritual beliefs. It split almost in half: half had actually returned
to the religions of their childhood, although none in a fundamentalist,
judgemental way, and the other half spoke more generally of the
sense that there was a meaning to suffering, a life after death.
And there was no question that they took great comfort from those
beliefs.
The long-term
survivors were all passionately committed to life. That may sound
pretty obvious, but for those of you who may have been around people
with AIDS, this is going to sound simplistic, but I can't think
of any other way to put it. When a catastrophic illness lands in
your lap, you really have two choices: it's either a challenge to
live, or challenge to begin dying, and I have seen people make both
choices. I have seen people give up, die on cue, and I have seen
people fight.
I want to be
really clear here: there is, among people with AIDS, this short-hand
notion, that if you want to be in the long-term survivor sweepstakes,
you have to have the right attitude. But nobody ever really defines
what that means. What is the right attitude? What I concluded from
interviewing four dozen long-term survivors, as friends, is that
you have to have the right attitude, by which I mean you have to
believe in the possibility of survival, and you have to be hopeful
and surround yourself with people who love and will support you.
That will not, however, guarantee that you are a long-term survivor.
The inverse seems to be true, however: I have not yet met a single
person, who became a long-term survivor, who did not believe that
it was possible.
It is interesting
that, at least it was interesting to me, that the profile of extraordinary
survivors with AIDS was pretty identical to the profile of extraordinary
survivors of other so-called terminal diseases.
Interestingly
enough, about half of the long-term survivors were in long-term
loving relationships, and those who were spoke about how they could
not envision going through AIDS alone. And taking tremendous comfort
and support from their loved-ones, and in some cases it was practical
support.
All of the
long-term survivors had dabbled with non-allopathic medicine. What
I would say about the long-term survivors is that most intergrated
allopathic and non-allopathic medicine. Out of the 48 people I interviewed
intensively, only one survivor had completely turned his back on
Western medicine, and refused to take any pharmaceutical. And I
have to say that he is still alive and glows with health. He is
probably the healthiest among us. He is macrobiotic.
Certainly,
no single alternative approach to healing predominated, I mean,
there were people who were into Reiki, or massage, or meditation,
or diet, or vitamins. And frankly, most people did not stick with
anyone approach. There was a lot of walking around.
Virtually every
long-term survivor was involved in the political struggle to end
AIDS, which is very interesting to me. My theory of why that might
be so is that AIDS can very easily consume you - your AIDS. You
can close the world around you. When you have AIDS, to know that
you are having some effect on other people, some beneficial effect
on other people, to get outside your own tragedy and connect with
other people, seem to be very important, seem to be healing.
I have been
pretty prominent in my opposition to the use of AZT. And I didn't
expect to find similar opposition among the long-term survivors,
but I did. It was pleasantly surprising. Of the four dozen, only
four had ever used it at all, and three are dead and one is dying
of AZT-induced lymphoma. The overwhelming majority of long-term
survivors had somehow managed to resist the enormous pressure to
take AZT. This was very much a distinguishing characteristic of
long-term survivors, by which I mean a scepticism about experimental
medications. Long-term survivors, for what it's worth, take a very
sceptical wait-and-see approach.
Nine out of
10 drugs that ever enter any phase of human testing fail, as either
too toxic or non-effective. Well, that to me is quite startling
if true: if the odds are stacked against you 9 to 1, then I do not
understand the current drugs-into-body frenzy. My AIDS activist
friends who are in the forefront of this drugs into-body frenzy,
I feel are very misleading to people with AIDS who are frightened
and desperate. They only seem to talk about two possible outcomes
to taking experimental drugs: one is that it works and one that
it doesn't. There is a third, apparently much more common possibility,
which is that you will be worse off than if you did nothing at all.
And nobody likes to talk about that because it's so unpleasant,
but from my reading of the literature, sometimes doing nothing is
much better than doing the wrong thing. And it would seem, on the
record of government sponsored clinical trials, that most people
are actually worse off taking these toxic drugs that if they hadn't
started at all.
The above
was abstracted from a transcript of a talk Michael Callen gave in
May 1992 in Amsterdam at the international symposium 'AIDS; A Different
View'.
Michael
Callen is the author of 'Surviving
AIDS'; published by Harper Collins Publishers, New York
1990 (ISBN 0-06-016148-5)
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