Interview 12  

Interview 12

Age at Interview: 38
Sex: Male
Age at Diagnosis: 24
Background: A gay man of British/Irish descent who works full-time and is in a long-term partnership.

Brief outline:He suffered from severe diarrhoea and peripheral neuropathy while taking an earlier combination of anti-HIV drugs, but he currently takes nelfinavir, 3TC and abacavir with few side effects. He has had to cope with HIV-related illness, depression and mania at various times in his life.

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He felt different, anxious and isolated from an early age.
 
He put up with diarrhoea and painful feet on his new combination because it worked so well.
 
An irregular heart beat and high cholesterol were treated as potentially serious side effects.
 
He was shocked that he progressed to Aids so quickly but he found ways to avoid thinking about the seriousness of the diagnosis.
 
Counselling validated the anger he had previously skipped over, and he realised the seductiveness of some feelings.
 
Initially he believed he could restrict his sex life because he was not aware of the full range of sexual possibilities.
 
Compares an encounter about treatment with a HIV consultant and a counsellor.
 
Describes his seroconversion illness.
 
Was facing multiple problems and was very angry.
 
Felt he was badly advised and so missed out on medical retirement in 1990.
 
When he was diagnosed with HIV early on in the epidemic he had good sickness benefits from work and initially enjoyed having time off.
 
Argues that prosecutions of people for HIV transmission stigmatises him as a potential criminal.
 
He has not told his parents about his HIV status to avoid hurting them, but he wonders if he feels ashamed.
 
While they always had safe sex, using condoms felt like missing out on a reward.
 
Believes that the high level of service he gets from the NHS will not last.
 
When facing death he comforted himself that an early death was not unusual in human history.
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