Tale of one city: a history of HIV/AIDS policy-making in Edinburgh, 1982-1994
Abstract
The historiography surrounding the policy response to AIDS/HIV has largely
focussed on the national or international picture. This thesis seeks to provide a muchneeded
local perspective by examining the dynamics of policy-making in Edinburgh -
the so-called `AIDS Capital of Europe' - during the period 1982-94. The thesis is
primarily based on a wide range of hitherto unexplored primary sources generated by
the Scottish Office and health authorities north of the Border. These sources have
furnished new insights into the policy-making process and the interaction between the
local and central state. In particular, it has enabled the author to compare and contrast
the Edinburgh experience with that of other parts of the UK.
An introductory section locates the study within both the broader literature on the
social response to disease and the more specific historiography of AIDS/HIV, while
Chapter 2 provides a pre-AIDS history of the policy response to disease in Edinburgh.
The main body of the thesis comprises four parts. The first two parts address the
response to AIDS/HIV between 1982-1987, concentrating on the early role in policymaking
of a medico-gay alliance, debates on the problem of haemophiliacs and AIDS
as a `disease of the blood', the increasing association of AIDS as a drug-related
disease with associated debates on the uses of screening, needle exchange and
methadone therapy, and health education. The last two parts analyse the policy
responses between 1987-1994, especially the formulation of new care and treatment
strategies, the relationship between voluntary and statutory groups and the
establishment of a new health education campaign in Edinburgh.
While acknowledging that much of policy-making followed a UK pattern, the
conclusion seeks to tease out what was distinctive about the experience of AIDS/HIV
policy-making in Edinburgh, using specifically the findings of Professor Virginia
Berridge as a comparator. The evidence would suggest that Edinburgh's response to
AIDS/HIV was shaped by local factors such as the legacy of previous responses to
diseases, the distinctive drug-related epidemiology of HIV in the City, and the
particular configuration of local pressure groups and civic authority. It was also
heavily influenced by a number of distinctively Scottish factors, including Scotland's
legal and health education structures, its blood transfusion service and clinical input.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

