| 1926 |
- Some scientists
believe HIV
spread from monkeys to humans
between 1926 - 1946. Recent research indicates
HIV most probably first jumped from chimpanzees
to humans as early as 1675 and didn't establish
itself as an epidemic strain in Africa until
1930.
|

|
| 1959 |
|
A
History of HIV/AIDS:
A U.S.
Perspective
|
| 1978 |
- Gay men in the US
and Sweden
-- and heterosexuals in Tanzania
and Haiti
-- begin showing signs of what will later be
called AIDS.
|
|
| 1980 |
|
- Deaths in US -- 31
(includes all known cases 1981 and before)
|
| 1981 |
- CDC
(USA) notices an alarming rate of a rare cancer
(Kaposi's Sarcoma) in otherwise healthy gay men.
They first call the disease "gay
cancer" but soon rename it GRID
("gay-related immune deficiency").
|
- 422 cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 159 are dead.
|
| 1982 |
- CDC
(USA) links the new disease to blood.
- The term AIDS
("acquired immune deficiency
syndrome") is used for the first time.
-
US President
Ronald Reagan has not mentioned the word
"AIDS" in public yet.
|
|
| 1983 |
- CDC (USA) warns
blood banks of a possible problem with the blood
supply.
- Institut
Pasteur (France)
finds the virus (HIV).
- US President
Ronald Reagan has not mentioned the word
"AIDS" in public yet.
|
- 4,749 cases of
AIDS in the U.S.; 2,122 are dead.
|
| 1984 |
- Dr. Robert Gallo
(US) claims
he discovered the virus that causes AIDS;
however, this is about a year after the French
discovery.
- US President
Ronald Reagan has not mentioned the word
"AIDS" in public yet.
|
- Opus
BBS is released, becoming the first mainstream
software system to donate 100% of its proceeds
to AIDS care/research.
- 11,055 cases of
AIDS diagnosed in the U.S.; 5,620 are dead,
including --
- Gaetan Dugas,
listed in The Band Played On as
"patient
zero."
|
| 1985 |
- The FDA
(US) approves the first HIV antibody test. Blood
products begin to be tested in the US and Japan.
- The first
International Conference on AIDS is held in
Atlanta (US).
- US President
Ronald Reagan has not mentioned the word
"AIDS" in public yet.
|
- AmFAR
is founded in Los Angeles.
- The first
AIDS-related play --
The Normal Heart, by
Larry Kramer -- opens in New York.
- 22,996 cases of
AIDS diagnosed in the U.S.; 12,592 are dead,
including --
|
| 1986 |
- US Surgeon General
Everett Koop publishes a
report on AIDS. It
calls for sex education.
- Switzerland begins
testing of blood products.
- US President
Ronald Reagan has not mentioned the word
"AIDS" in public yet.
|
- ACT
UP is founded in
New York City.
- Ben Gardiner's AIDS
BBS goes on-line in San Francisco, CA (USA).
- 42,255 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 24,669 people are dead.
|
| 1987 |
- AZT (zidovudine,
Retrovir®) -- Glaxo
Wellcome -- becomes the first anti-HIV drug
approved by the FDA.
The recommended dose is one 100mg capsule every
four hours around the clock.
- Canada
stops distribution of tainted blood products.
- The US shuts its
doors to HIV-infected immigrants and travelers.
- After a six year
silence, US
President Ronald Reagan uses the
word "AIDS" in public for the first
time. And, Vice President George Bush is heckled
when he calls for mandatory HIV testing.
|
- A family --
including three HIV-positive sons (hemophiliacs)
-- are driven
from their home (Arcadia, Florida, US) after
their home was torched by an arsonist.
- After an ACT UP
demonstration, the FDA announces a two year
shortening in the drug-approval process.
- The AIDS
Memorial Quilt is started in San Francisco
(US).
- And The
Band Played On by Randy
Shilts is published.
- 71,176 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 41,027 people are dead,
including --
- Liberace,
entertainer (PCP).
- Michael
Bennett, Broadway director (Chorus Line).
|
| 1988 |
- US bans
discrimination against federal workers with
HIV.
- US mails
107 million copies of "Understanding
AIDS," a booklet by Surgeon General C.
Everett Koop.
- FDA (US) okays
importation of non-approved treatment for PWA
personal use.
|
- 106,994 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 62,101 people are dead.
|
| 1989 |
- Haiti stops
distribution of tainted blood products.
- FDA (US) approves pentamidine
mist for use against PCP.
- After two years of
intense ACT UP protests over the price of its
drug, AZT, Burroughs Wellcome lowers AZT's price
by 20%.
|
- 149,902 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 89,817 are dead,
including --
|
| 1990 |
- Ronald Reagan apologizes
for his neglect of the epidemic while he was
president (US).
|
- ĘGIS is founded
by Sr.
Mary Elizabeth and the Sisters Of St.
Elizabeth Of Hungary.
- 198,466 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 121,255 are dead,
including --
|
| 1991 |
- ddI (didanosine,
Videx®) -- Bristol-Myers
Squibb -- a nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitor, is approved
for use in the USA.
- 10 million have
HIV worldwide (WHO). More than a million are in
the US (CDC).
|
- Professional
basketball player Magic Johnson tells the world he
has HIV.
- Kimberly Bergalis,
who apparently
got
HIV from her dentist asks the US congress to
force health care workers to be tested for HIV.
- 257,750 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 157,637 are dead.
|
| 1992 |
- ddC (zalcitabine,
Hivid®) -- Roche
-- a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor,
is approved
for use in the USA.
- First clinical
trial of multiple drugs is held.
- FDA (US) starts
"accelerated approval" -- interim
licensing -- to get promising drugs to PWAs
faster.
|
- PWAs Bob Hattoy
and Elizabeth Glaser give speeches to the US
Democratic National Convention.
- 335,211 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 198,322 are dead, including
-
|
| 1993 |
- CDC (US) revises
its definition
of AIDS, including new opportunistic
infections.
- The so-called
"female
condom" is approved.
In the US, the FDA refused
to allow testing for anal sex, saying sodomy
is illegal in too many states.
- Four French blood
bank officials sent
to prison for allowing HIV-tainted blood
into French blood banks.
- Researchers in
Europe show taking AZT (monotherapy) early in
the disease has no benefits (Concorde
study).
|
- 411,887 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 241,787 are dead, including
-
|
| 1994 |
- d4T (Zerit®)
-- Bristol-Myers
Squibb -- a nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitor, is approved
for use in the USA.
|
- A Benneton
advertisement depicts
US Pres. Ronald Reagan with K.S. lesions.
- 478,756 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 288,597 are dead, including
-
|
| 1995 |
- Saquinavir
(Invirase®) -- Roche
-- is approved
for use in the US. This is the first anti-HIV
drug in the protease inhibitor class.
- 3TC
(lamivudine; Epivir®) -- Glaxo
Wellcome -- a nucleoside reverse
transcriptase inhibitor, is approved for use in
the US.
-
- Germany convicts
four of selling HIV-tainted blood.
- US admits it was
the Institut
Pasteur (France), not Robert Gallo (NIH, US)
who discovered
the virus that causes AIDS.
|
- Olympic diver Greg
Louganis reveals
that he has AIDS.
- 534,806 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 332,249 people are dead,
including --
|
| 1996 |
- Nevirapine
(Viramune® -- Roxane
Laboratories, approved for use in the US.
This is the first anti-HIV drug in the class
called non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase
inhibitor.
- Ritonavir (Norvir®)
-- Abbott
-- a protease inhibitor, is approved
for use in the USA.
- Indinavir
(Crixivan®) -- Merck
-- a protease inhibitor, is approved
for use in the USA.
- Japan busts
Green Cross Pharmaceutical Corp. for dealing in
HIV-tainted blood.
- Researchers (UCSF)
show Kaposi's sarcoma is caused
by a herpes virus.
- TIME
magazine's 1996 Man of the Year is AIDS
researcher
Dr. David Ho.
|
- Basketball star
Magic Johnson returns
to play basketball.
- Heavyweight boxer
Tommy Morrison announces he
is HIV positive.
- California voters
passed Proposition 215 (55.7% to 44.3%) to allow
medical use of marijuana. Arizona passed
Proposition 200 by a much larger margin, 65.3%
to 34.7%.
- 548,102 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 343,000 people are dead,
including --
|
| 1997 |
- CDC
reports first case of probable HIV transmission
through kissing.
- CDC
reports annual AIDS deaths dropped in the U.S.
|
- Approximate total
worldwide death count -- 6,400,000.
- Approximate number
of HIV-positive people worldwide -- 22,000,000.
To put this number in perspective, it is larger
than the continent of Australia.
|
| 1998 |
- FDA approves abacavir
(trade name Ziagen) for the treatment of Human
Immunodeficiency Virus-1 (HIV-1) in adults and
children.
|
- AIDS Researcher Dr.
Jonathan Mann and his wife, Dr. Mary-Lou
Clements-Mann, were killed in the crash of
Swissair Flight 111.
- 665,357 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 401,028 people are dead.
|
| 1999 |
-
FDA granted
granted accelerated approval to amprenavir,
a new protease inhibitor for use in children
four years of age and older and in adults in
combination with other antiretrovirals for HIV
infection.
|
|
| 2001 |
-
Emergence of a
"super-virus" is noted in Poz Magazine. This
virus is resistant to all forms of currently
available treatments for HIV.
|
- Over 40 million
HIV infections worldwide, over 22 million dead.
- 750,000 AIDS cases
diagnosed in the U.S.; 450,000 people are dead.
|
| 2003 |
-
The first AIDS vaccine
studies are released. New class of anti-HIV
drugs are marketed in the US as
fusion inhibitors
bringing new hope to those people experiencing drug
resistance.
|
- Nearly 50 million
HIV infections and 30 million dead worldwide.
- 900,000 AIDS cases
in the U.S., and 500,000 people are dead.
- In Canada over
50,000 people are living with HIV.
|