The Genesis of Fear: AIDS and the Public's Response to Science
- 1 December 1986
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Law, Medicine and Health Care
- Vol. 14 (5-6) , 243-249
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-720x.1986.tb00991.x
Abstract
The AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome) crisis has aroused scientists to major research efforts and the public at times to near-hysteria. The media and their audience eagerly await the latest scientific reports, yet the public seems to respond selectively, embracing the most frightening interpretation of the data and discounting attempts to place those data in perspective. One might be tempted to conclude that questions of public health policy are best dealt with by expert judgment unsullied by lay opinion. Yet such an attitude supposes scientists to be governed by pure reason and to be beyond influence by narrow self-interest or by political or moralistic considerations, a self-serving assumption belied by an examination of the record. The erosion of public confidence in science has indeed bedeviled health authorities in their efforts to generate consensus on the policies they wish to implement, but the public response—including the response of scientists to AIDS—is a far more complex phenomenon.Keywords
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