Gay-related immune deficiency


Gay-related immune deficiency was the first name used for the disease now known as AIDS. GRID was first mentioned in a May 11, 1982 article in the New York Times. In this article, the "A.I.D." is also mentioned. In the early days of the disease, the term "gay plague" was also used, while similar terms were used for associated conditions later recognized as AIDS-defining clinical conditions, such as "gay cancer" for Kaposi's sarcoma and "gay pneumonia" for Pneumocystis pneumonia.
The term GRID was never used in the scientific biomedical literature. In the popular press, it was only used for a very short period of time. On August 8, 1982, the acronym AIDS first appeared in the New York Times. It was initially styled as A.I.D.S. The reason for the GRID-to-AIDS change in nomenclature was the realization that the "gay" attribution did not fully encompass the demographics of the disease. The use of GRID and "gay-related immune deficiency" in the popular literature reached a peak in 1995; the terms have rapidly sunk into obsolescence subsequently.
One reason for the use of "gay" in the disease name was that the first recognized cases of AIDS were restricted to gay men, who represented a marginalized group that could be easily further stigmatized. Another reason may have to do with the tendency of people in Western societies to seek meaning in diseased states. This phenomenon was recognized by Susan Sontag as a form of punishment, and in her book Illness as Metaphor, she wrote: "Nothing is more punitive than to give a disease a meaning". The third reason for the emphasis on sexual orientation may be due to the belief in the just-world hypothesis, i.e., the claim that we live in a world where people generally get what they deserve. According to this world view, the roots of an affliction must be sought in the victim; as with women who have been raped who must be guilty of seductive behavior, so the reason for AIDS must be that those afflicted are guilty of immoral acts.