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Dr. Lawrence Mass, who wrote the first article about AIDS in a U.S. publication, points to South Africa when reflecting on the legacy of AIDS denialism. The legacy, he says, is the death â the preventable unnecessary deaths â of more of 330,000 people there. Credit: Elias Williams for NPR
Skepticism Of Science In A Pandemic Isn t New. It Helped Fuel The AIDS Crisis By
at 3:01 am NPR
Forty years ago, Lawrence Mass, a young, gay doctor living in New York City, made history. It is the kind of history no one wants to make.
Mass began writing news stories about a disease that many did not want to acknowledge.
Skepticism Of Science In A Pandemic Isn t New It Helped Fuel The AIDS Crisis
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Skepticism Of Science In A Pandemic Isn t New It Helped Fuel The AIDS Crisis
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Dr. Lawrence Mass, who wrote the first article about AIDS in a U.S. publication, points to South Africa when reflecting on the legacy of AIDS denialism. The legacy, he says, is the death the preventable unnecessary deaths of more of 330,000 people there. Elias Williams for NPR
toggle caption Elias Williams for NPR
Dr. Lawrence Mass, who wrote the first article about AIDS in a U.S. publication, points to South Africa when reflecting on the legacy of AIDS denialism. The legacy, he says, is the death the preventable unnecessary deaths of more of 330,000 people there. Elias Williams for NPR
2 hours ago by Reena Advani, Ryan Benk & Noel King (NPR)
Dr. Lawrence Mass, who wrote the first article about AIDS in a U.S. publication, points to South Africa when reflecting on the legacy of AIDS denialism. The legacy, he says, is the death the preventable unnecessary deaths of more of 330,000 people there.
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Forty years ago, Lawrence Mass, a young, gay doctor living in New York City, made history. It is the kind of history no one wants to make.