Real Answers to the Fake Questions in “House of Numbers”
“House of Numbers” is a film with a hidden agenda: it
tries to make viewers doubt the reality that the virus called HIV exists and
causes AIDS. It conceals this
agenda behind a false veneer of honest inquiry. The filmmaker, Brent Leung, told a Huffington Post blogger: “I am not a denialist. Posing questions
is very different than denying something. … I traveled the globe speaking with scientists, activists,
clinicians, journalists and patients asking questions. My main goal? To educate
myself and others, and to generate discussion on important questions that have
not yet been answered.” But Leung is an HIV denialist—he has said he is
“neutral” on the issue of HIV/AIDS, which means he rejects the evidence-based
science that has conclusively proved the existence of HIV and its causative
role in AIDS, a fatal disease syndrome.
His film is supported and promoted only by denialists. And Leung in fact
got the information he sought from the legitimate scientists, doctors, and
advocates he interviewed, but he then edited it out of the film to deceive and
confuse viewers. The audience is
manipulated to reach the wrong answers to the questions he ask. Since Leung leaves his own positions
unstated, he dodges accountability for the film’s potential impact—namely, that
people might decide that they don’t need to protect themselves or others from
being infected with HIV, or that people living with HIV might reject medical
care and the medications that could keep them healthy.
Here
we summarize the fake “questions” Leung raises in the film, and provide real,
evidence-based answers.
“House
of Numbers” asks if there is really a scientific consensus about HIV/AIDS.
The real answer is: YES. There is an overwhelming scientific
consensus, based on incontrovertible evidence, that HIV exists and is the cause
of AIDS. The scientific evidence has shown
conclusively that HIV exists, is transmitted by the blood and sexual fluids of
infected people, and gradually destroys the human immune system, resulting in
AIDS, a syndrome manifesting in various diseases that healthy people fight off
but that cause illness and ultimately death in people with advanced HIV
disease. Before the advent of
antiviral medications, people with advanced HIV disease had multiple,
devastating infections and symptoms that would not seriously harm a person with
a healthy immune system. Since
1981, over 25 million people worldwide have died from HIV/AIDS.
The makers of “House of Numbers” deceived legitimate
HIV researchers, infectious disease doctors, and AIDS activists and
philanthropists to get interviews with them, and they edited the footage to
make it seem that there is disagreement that HIV exists
and is the necessary cause of AIDS. These facts have been established in
laboratories, clinically, and by epidemiology, and published in tens of
thousands of peer-reviewed publications. We
have much still to learn about HIV and AIDS, and some scientists don’t like
each other, but no legitimate, qualified scientist or doctor questions the
existence or consequences of the virus.
“House of Numbers” questions the
reliability of the HIV test. Does the HIV antibody test actually tell us
anything at all?
The real answer is: YES. HIV
tests are extremely reliable, sensitive and specific. What is usually referred to as the “HIV test” is just
one step in HIV screening and diagnosis. The ELISA or EIA test screens for the
presence of HIV antibodies in blood or oral fluids. In any diagnostic
tests, there is a balance between sensitivity (recognizing everyone who is a
true positive, who has the virus or whatever is tested for) and
specificity (recognizing everyone
who is a true negative, who doesn’t have the virus or whatever is tested
for). Greater sensitivity always
means more false positives, because very sensitive test will react to some
things that are not the virus as if it were. Although rare, HIV false positives can happen: they are
caused by the ELISA test reacting to antibodies produced in pregnancy or from
some autoimmune diseases. (It is
not true, as denialists claim, that 70 different conditions can cause false
positives. And false positives are a feature of all screening tests, not just
those for HIV. For example, some
men will test positive for pregnancy. It doesn’t mean they are pregnant, or
that pregnancy tests are totally useless, or that pregnancy doesn’t exist: it
only means that the test is calibrated to capture all pregnancies when used
correctly because a false negative is a bigger problem than a false positive.)
The ELISA test for HIV is very sensitive, because it is used to
screen the blood supply and any false negatives could result in the HIV
infection of hundreds of people. A positive ELISA test is 99.5%
sensitive after the “window period” following infection, before HIV antibodies
have developed. Because there
is a small risk of a false positive, every HIV test is then confirmed with a
Western Blot test. The two-test protocol is over 99.9%
accurate, and clinical monitoring of a patient’s viral load and immune system
by a physician further confirms the diagnosis. Misdiagnoses of HIV infection resulting in
inappropriate treatment with antiretroviral drugs are extremely rare and are
considered malpractice. (In 2007, an HIV-negative Massachusetts woman, Audrey
Serrano, sued and won $2.5 million in damages against the doctor who treated
her for AIDS without confirming that she was HIV infected. The HIV testing technology is so good
that there is simply no excuse for the mistake that her doctor made.)
“House of Numbers” questions the
practice of asking about risk factors in testing and diagnosis. Don’t doctors
just want to know if you are gay or a drug user, and isn’t the diagnosis really
bogus?
The real answer is: NO. Questions about risk factors are part
of good screening, diagnosis and care. One step in many HIV testing protocols is an interview to assess
the individual’s risk of infection.
This has value as for prevention education; in addition, knowledge about
risk helps frame the accuracy of a screening test. For straightforward statistical reasons, the likelihood of a
false positive is higher where there are no risk factors and low prevalence
than where risk factors and prevalence are high. But every positive ELISA test is still confirmed by a
Western Blot or other test.
The HIV tester in the movie who says that an AIDS diagnosis would be
dependent on risks being acknowledged in an interview was simply wrong. It seems likely that she was asked
misleading questions by the interviewers.
“House of Numbers” questions why
some people who are exposed to HIV are not infected. Maybe HIV isn’t
communicable? Maybe it doesn’t
exist?
The real answers are NO and NO.
There is no virus for which exposure always leads to infection. It should be obvious that not everyone exposed to a
pathogen gets sick. Everyone knows
that when someone in an office has a cold, some co-workers will catch it, and
others won’t: how many do get sick depends in part on what steps people take to
reduce the possibility of transmission.
In the film, denialist Liam Scheff says that scientists say that HIV is
so infectious it “leaps of penises into vaginas.” That’s a lie—people
knowledgeable about HIV are clear that HIV is a hard virus to get—but the
consequences of infection are serious, so prevention is crucial. The
likelihood that a virus, including HIV, will be transmitted depends on many
factors, including the nature of the contact, the innate transmissibility
of the particular virus, the nature of the exposure or contact, how long the
virus survives outside the body, and the viral load of the person who has it
(people recently infected have very high levels of virus, while people on
antiretroviral HIV medications have low, sometimes undetectable levels). This may be complicated, but it isn’t
unusual at all. (And be aware that many HIV denialists reject the existence not
only of HIV but of ALL viruses, and even of the role of germs in disease!)
“House of Numbers”
questions how one disease varies so much in different people. Could it be that there’s no such
disease as AIDS?
The real answer is: No. HIV
infection will, over time, destroy the immune system in almost all infected
people. The immune system is then
unable to fight off opportunistic infections that are present in the
environment, and they will get sick and die. Different strains of the virus and different regionally
endemic diseases that affect immune-compromised people account for geographic
variation in HIV disease patterns. Once a person is infected, the rate of
disease progression is affected by many factors—the strain of the virus and the
person’s age, overall health, environment, nutrition.
Causality does not require
uniformity to be demonstrated. While there is a period averaging ten years when an HIV-positive person is clinically
asymptomatic (that is, has no major symptoms), there is great variation between
people’s HIV disease progression, even within the same region or even
household. For example, Christine
Maggiore, an HIV-infected denialist, said she first tested positive in 1992:
she survived without HIV treatment for fifteen years until her death from AIDS
last December. Her daughter, to whom she transmitted the virus perinatally,
survived only 3 ½ years without treatment: she died, tragically and
unnecessarily, of AIDS in 2005.
“House of Numbers” asks if a disease that is diagnosed differently
on different continents is really only one disease.
The real answer is: YES. It is all HIV disease, and how the
doctors and public health officials in different countries decide to mark the
point at which it becomes full-blown
“AIDS” doesn’t alter the reality of the virus and its effects. The
virus doesn’t care what you call it, and the progression of the untreated
disease is not driven by, but only expressed in, diagnostic language. Differences in diagnostic criteria by
region reflect lack of access to HIV testing technologies and different
clinical approaches: specifically, most African countries’ health systems
cannot afford HIV testing. That doesn’t mean that HIV doesn’t exist or that
poverty causes AIDS. Where HIV tests are not available, an AIDS diagnosis obviously
cannot include HIV status as an element of an AIDS diagnosis, so the diagnosis
is based on the presence of opportunistic infections that would only afflict a
person with a compromised immune system.
“House
of Numbers” asks if the profits that pharmaceutical companies make from HIV
drugs might in fact be the reason for the invention of HIV/AIDS.
The real answer is:
NO. The fact that the pharmaceutical industry does make money from HIV drugs
does not mean that there is no such thing as HIV or AIDS. From
the earliest days of the epidemic, AIDS activists have demanded the
pharmaceutical industry and the government do smarter, more ethical, and
expanded research. Activists have fought for the rapid development of better,
more effective, more tolerable, and more affordable treatments for HIV, and the
current generation of antiretroviral drugs for HIV are effective and easily
tolerated by most people living with the virus. But that can lead to complacency and even the HIV denialism
showcased by “House of Numbers. ”
We must continue to fight to make HIV treatment accessible and
affordable to everyone who needs it, including through the production of
generics and international trade strategies like compulsory licensing that cut
into the drug companies’ profits. We need to fight for prevention strategies
that are science-based and really work, like needle-exchange and condoms, and
more fundamentally address the structural injustices that render some
populations much more vulnerable to HIV, as well as to other diseases. And we must press for the development
of vaccines, other prevention technologies like microbicides and post-exposure
prophylaxis, and ultimately for a cure.
Jeanne Bergman
www.AIDStruth.org
September 2009