Bennett Cary, Donovan Raymond
University of Newcastle.
Health History. 2009;11(2):92-115.
This article examines the controversy around the proposal in the late 1980s and early 1990s to mainstream HIV/AIDS treatment, services, and care in Australia. With the predicted increase in HIV infections, and with improved prophylaxis and antiretroviral therapy (such as AZT) extending the lives of people with HIV/AIDS, mainstreaming was proposed as a strategy that could meet the anticipated increased demand in HIV/AIDS services. Our analysis suggests that mainstreaming was strategically positioned as a necessary intermediary step between specialist and community control, one in which general practitioners and local health workers would serve as conduits through which specialist knowledge and information could be deployed. The strategy also reflected a general shift in thinking and acting on public health that emerged in the late 1980s, a shift that sought, inter alia, to reorientate health services towards fostering the self-managing capacities of HIV/AIDS affected communities.
本文探讨了20世纪80年代末和90年代初澳大利亚围绕将艾滋病毒/艾滋病治疗、服务和护理纳入主流的提议所引发的争议。随着预计艾滋病毒感染人数的增加,以及预防性治疗和抗逆转录病毒疗法(如齐多夫定)的改进延长了艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者的生命,将其纳入主流被提议作为一项能够满足艾滋病毒/艾滋病服务预期增长需求的战略。我们的分析表明,将其纳入主流在战略上被定位为专科控制和社区控制之间的必要中间步骤,在这一步骤中全科医生和当地卫生工作者将充当渠道,通过这些渠道可以部署专业知识和信息。该战略还反映了20世纪80年代末出现的公共卫生思维和行动的总体转变,这种转变尤其寻求将卫生服务重新定位,以培养受艾滋病毒/艾滋病影响社区的自我管理能力。