Body Count: Fixing the Blame for the Global AIDS Catastrophe

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Thunder's Mouth Press, 2006 - Medical - 217 pages
Twenty-five years on, with twenty million dead and another forty million infected, AIDS is the world's worst epidemic. But the catastrophe could have been prevented. "Body Count" explains how millions could have been saved and many million more infections could have been prevented if the world had responded properly to the crisis.
To get this story, Peter Gill has traveled the world and interviewed dozens of the key players, including C. Everett Koop, Colin Powell, Sandy Thurman (the Clinton "AIDS czar"), Larry Kramer -- and the Bush Administration's own Randall Tobias, the Bush chief AIDS official. Including both personal accounts and individual profiles, as well as analyses of insitutional efforts, "Body Count" is a harrowing read, and one of the most important books of the year.

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About the author (2006)

Peter Gill recently led a major BBC campaign against AIDS in India. He has been a foreign correspondent for the Daily Telegraph in South Asia and the Middle East. As a TV current affairs reporter, he was one of the journalists who brought the 1984 Ethiopian famine to world attention.

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