00:00:00Mary Chamberland
MILLER: This is Dr. Bess Miller, and I'm here with Dr. Mary Chamberland. Today's
date is December 9, 2016, and we are in Atlanta, Georgia, at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention [CDC]. I am interviewing Dr. Chamberland as part
of the Oral History Project, the Early Years of AIDS: CDC's Response to a
Historic Epidemic. We are here to discuss your experience during the early years
of CDC's work on what would become known as AIDS, the Acquired Immunodeficiency
Syndrome. Dr. Chamberland, do I have your permission to interview you and to
record this interview?
CHAMBERLAND: Yes, you do, Bess.
MILLER: For this oral history on the early years of AIDS [acquired immune
deficiency syndrome] at CDC, we will be focusing on the first several years,
beginning in June of 1981 with the publication of the first MMWR [Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report] on the five cases of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
[PCP] among homosexual men. I know you worked on many aspects of the disease
00:01:00after this early period, and we will try to cover a few of those areas as well,
but let's begin with your background. Would you tell me about where you grew up
and your early family life, and then where you went to college?
CHAMBERLAND: I was born in Hartford, Connecticut. I grew up in Hartford and the
surrounding suburbs and was the oldest of four children. My parents did not have
the opportunity to go to college themselves, but they were adamant that their
four children get a higher education. So after high school, I attended Regis
College, which is a small and, at that time, all-women's Catholic college; it's
since gone co-educational. I arrived at Regis in 1970 with every intention of
majoring in American History or English and being an elementary school teacher.
00:02:00But that's not, obviously, how things played out.
MILLER: How did things change? What changed your mind?
CHAMBERLAND: My first exposure to hospital work was actually in January of my
freshman year. The school had organized the academic calendar such that students
were free during the month of January to do a nontraditional course of study,
and you could actually create your own program of study. With the help of a
family friend who was a nursing supervisor at the local hospital, I was
permitted to shadow a couple of the infection control nurses at one of the
hospitals in Hartford. I kind of liked it; it was interesting. Subsequently,
during the next few summers I worked as a nurse's aide at the same hospital and
00:03:00just got increasingly interested in the clinical aspects of patient care. I
started to have second thoughts about the elementary school teacher route, but I
was thinking initially of nursing and that I would perhaps go to nursing school.
I could have transferred out of Regis, but I essentially was just too lazy to
think about instituting all the paperwork. I thought, I'll finish Regis and then
transfer to a nursing school and get a Bachelors in Nursing. But I thought with
that idea that I perhaps needed to lighten up on the Latin and the English
courses and change my major to biology. I remember going to the head of the
Biology Department and speaking with Sister Cecilia Agnes, or C.A. as she was
known to one and all, and telling her of my plan and actually almost trying to
00:04:00have her talk me out of being a biology major. Science had never been my strong
suit. I just was convinced I was going to flunk out. So C.A. just looked at me
and she said, let's just have you take one day at a time.
I started taking biology and chemistry, and to my great surprise I really
started to enjoy science and math. I had a fantastic math professor, Susan
Williamson. Susan made calculus and number theory really understandable for the
first time. At the beginning of my junior year, I found myself in Susan's
office, and she said, hey, what do you think you're going to do? You're going to
be graduating in a couple of years. I told her about my plan: I'll finish at
00:05:00Regis and then I'll probably go to a place like Cornell and get a BSN [Bachelor
of Science in Nursing]. Susan looked at me dead on, and she said, you don't have
to go to nursing school. You can go to medical school. I looked at her, and I
said, I was thinking about that, too. She just looked and said, just go do it.
At that moment it was like this weight had been lifted off my shoulders, and I
thought, I know what I want to be when I grow up. It was just a moment of sheer
happiness. I literally skipped back to my dorm, got in my dorm room, and the
radio was playing [the song] "I Can See Clearly Now." I thought, this is it! I
know what I want to do. So that, through the mentoring of some very caring
professors, was how I found myself headed to medical school.
MILLER: That's a great story. Where did you end up going to medical school?
00:06:00
CHAMBERLAND: I had a little bit of a detour. I didn't get to medical school
right away. I did apply my senior year and had several rounds of interviews at
various medical schools. I encountered the same theme, which was, you're not a
great standardized test taker. My MCAT [Medical College Admission Test] scores
were fair. They said, oh, Regis College. We've never really heard of Regis. What
does an "A" at Regis mean? We don't know what that is. So, I didn't get accepted
to medical school. Senior year was coming to a close, and I was feeling pretty
rejected and dejected. C.A. came to the rescue and said, look, take a year,
start graduate school. I was accepted into Smith College's graduate program in
microbiology as a graduate teaching fellow. I started taking courses at Smith,
and I got A's at Smith. I went back and reapplied, and I said, okay, you guys
00:07:00know what an A at Smith means. To my great good fortune, I got an acceptance
letter from New York Medical College, which was well-timed and spared me the
anguish of having to think about writing a graduate thesis in microbiology. So
it was at New York Medical College that I ended up .
MILLER: Excellent. How did you get interested in public health?
CHAMBERLAND: It turns out when I was in medical school, I actually did a
two-month elective at CDC. This was at the encouragement of an infectious
disease physician at the same hospital where I had done this shadowing of the
infection control nurses. And it was fun. I got to go out on an outbreak of
gastroenteritis at a college campus in New England with an EIS [Epidemic
Intelligence Service] officer, and I investigated a mysterious rash illness
00:08:00among hockey players that was afflicting some members of the Atlanta Flames
hockey team. I had been assigned to the Special Pathogens Branch, which at that
time was headed up by [Dr. David] Dave Fraser, who obviously had a solidly
minted reputation as a result of the very successful Legionnaires' outbreak investigation.
I had some vague notion of wanting to return to CDC, but I wasn't just quite
sure how that would work out. After medical school I started a traditional
three-year residency in internal medicine back in Hartford at a different
hospital, Hartford Hospital. I was a pretty unhappy intern. I had a lot of-- it
seemed like patients just did not do well. I had attracted patients with medical
00:09:00disasters. It was at the beginning of the second year I saw an advert in the New
England Journal of Medicine. The U.S. Public Health Service was actively seeking
physicians to get them interested in careers in public health and epidemiology.
At the time, public health and epidemiology were very underappreciated and
understaffed disciplines. A career in public health was certainly not on any
physician's top 10 list of medical specialties. As a way to try and attract
interest in this specialty, something called the Epidemiology Program that was
run out of the NIH [National Institutes of Health] was developed. The program
was a one-year, fully paid year of study at a school of public health in the
00:10:00United States, and then a two-year "payback" at a federal agency; so CDC, FDA
[Food and Drug Administration], and NIH. I applied for the program, and I was
accepted. However, the acceptance came two years and two months into my
three-year residency in internal medicine, and it was a really tough decision. A
lot of my colleagues thought I was somewhat nuts to leave, being so close to
finishing the residency. But I packed my bags and drove up to Boston and did a
year at the Harvard School of Public Health. Then when it came time for
placement, I remember having a conversation with [Dr. Philip] Phil Brachman here
at CDC. Phil headed up the EIS program at the time, and he was kind of
00:11:00befuddled. This was all new; he'd never had anybody in this program. After a few
minutes of conversation, he said, I'm just going to make you an EIS officer. I
said, great! That's exactly what I want to do anyway. So in 1982, that was the
year I entered the EIS program.
MILLER: Wow, that's fascinating and sounds kind of unique.
CHAMBERLAND: It was.
MILLER: You did your internship and first-year residency during the early 80s.
Did you see AIDS patients at that time, or patients with the syndrome that would
be known as AIDS?
CHAMBERLAND: Actually we did, and this is also an interesting tie to CDC. During
my third year, the two months of the third year of my internal medicine
residency-- which, by the way, I ultimately did end up finishing some four years
later--I was in the ICU [intensive care unit], the medical ICU, as a senior
00:12:00resident. We had a patient in the ICU, a male with Pneumocystis carinii
pneumonia, and we had no idea why this guy had PCP. He didn't fit the
traditional risk factors, was not a renal transplant patient, didn't have some
immunologic disorder. So we were really scratching our heads, as were the
infectious disease attendings [attending physicians]. It was 1981, and the MMWR
about those first cases of Pneumocystis pneumonia in gay men came out. In those
days, the MMWR was mailed in the post, so it wasn't until early July. I was
standing at the ICU desk, and the infectious disease attending came running into
the ICU holding the MMWR in his hand, and he said, this is it. This is what our
00:13:00guy has. So we went over to the bedside, and of course, none of us had ever
thought to take a sexual history. We asked him, do you have sex with men? Yep.
Did he have sex with men in New York City? Yep. So this ended up being one of
the earlier cases of AIDS nationally, but it was certainly my first exposure to
having to treat a patient with AIDS.
MILLER: You came to CDC as an EIS officer in July of '82, and you got matched to
a field assignment in New York City. You were one of the so-called field
officers, the group of EIS officers that are assigned either to a city or a
state health department. Can you describe the setup a bit in New York City for
you as a first-year EIS officer? How was your assignment structured, and who
00:14:00were your supervisor and colleagues?
CHAMBERLAND: I remember during that matching process, when the new EIS officers
tried to figure out where they wanted to do [for] their two-year assignment, I
was really torn. I really thought hard about staying in Atlanta and going to the
Hospital Infections Program, with all of this exposure that I had had to
infection control. But I remember interviewing with the people from New York
City, and [Dr. Pauline] Polly Thomas was the EIS officer a year ahead of me. She
had been very involved in some of these early cases of AIDS; she had been one of
the investigators for the case-control study of the disease in gay men. I
remember really clicking with Polly and liked the idea of coming back to New
00:15:00York; I'd gone to medical school in New York. I ultimately opted for New York.
I arrived in New York in August after the four-week training course that we had
in Atlanta that all new officers took. I remember thinking, okay, on the first
day I'm going to set up my desk, get to know people and slide into this easily.
I got there, and I was greeted by Dr. [David] Sencer. David Sencer was the
Health Commissioner for the City of New York. After finishing his time as the
CDC Director in January of 1982, he had been appointed City Health Commissioner.
I was greeted by Dr. Sencer and Polly with, oh, thank God you're here, we're
sending you out to the Bronx. There's been an outbreak of gastroenteritis in the
00:16:00newborn nursery. It's been going on for a couple of months, and we've been
telling them we're going to send the new EIS officer. They were kind enough to
get me to the Bronx in a City Health Department car, but I was then handed a
subway map and told, you can figure out how to get yourself back to Manhattan
using the subway, right? I said, yeah, sure. So, I plunged right in. No introductions.
A couple weeks later, Polly and I were boarding a cruise ship docked in New York
City harbor that had had a big outbreak of gastroenteritis, again, among the
passengers and crew. Polly was nine months pregnant at this point, and we were
lumbering up the deck being greeted by this very unhappy captain, who for all
the world looked like the captain of the Love Boat, all decked out in one of
00:17:00those white uniforms. We spent a couple of days on the ship interviewing the
crew and working with the sanitation department officers at the health
department. Finally, it was getting to be the end of August, and Polly clearly
had some premonition that the days of her confinement were coming to an end. One
night we stayed late in the office, and she just started really cramming in,
okay, I've got to teach you about how AIDS surveillance works, how you take case
reports over the phone, how you tabulate the data every month for the health
department meeting that Dr. Sencer holds for all the clinicians at the end of
the month. So I got this crash course, and sure enough, that evening actually,
Polly went into labor. For the next two or three months I was head first into
00:18:00AIDS surveillance in New York City.
MILLER: Wow. You would have had a supervisor back in Atlanta as well. Did you
have a supervisor that you related to on a periodic basis?
CHAMBERLAND: [Dr.] Lyle Conrad was the head of the so-called Field Services
Division, and then under him were a couple of other individuals. They divided up
the country geographically. [Dr.] John Andrews was my Atlanta-based supervisor
of record and was very helpful. We had to at that time submit monthly reports
from the field. There was a format, and you had to briefly outline what
activities you had undertaken that particular month, meetings that you'd gone
00:19:00to, any travel that you had done, any media exposure that you had, and any uses
of the federal credit card that you had charged. As things turned out, I
certainly did have non-AIDS-related activities over those two years, but
increasingly, I would say probably a good 85% of my time ended up being on
AIDS-related surveillance in particular and AIDS-related investigations. I came
to see people like [Dr. James] Jim Curran and [Dr.] Harold Jaffe, who were
frequent visitors [as my "supervisors"]. They were frequent fliers to New York
City, because in those early days New York and California were where the cases
were concentrated, so they were coming up frequently. Particularly for the
establishment of AIDS surveillance in New York City, I worked very closely with
00:20:00[Dr. James] Jim Allen, who had previously been in the Hospital Infections
Program but had taken on a position in the AIDS Program as the lead for national
AIDS surveillance.
MILLER: You mentioned that Dr. Sencer was a big presence, and of course, we know
he was a big presence in New York City. Can you tell us a little bit more about
what he was like in that role, his leadership style?
CHAMBERLAND: He was a fantastic mentor. As people often spoke about in Atlanta,
his modus operandi in New York I think was very similar, which was he roamed the
corridors and sought out his staff. Hey, what ya doing, what ya working on?
What's new? He was very, very engaged with "his" EIS officers. That first year
00:21:00it was Polly and me. But in 1983 we were joined by a couple of additional EIS
officers, [Dr.] Rand Stoneburner and [Dr.] George Rutherford, who had
transferred into New York City from other positions. We had David Sencer's ear.
He sought us out, and he pretty much had an open door policy. We didn't have to
make an appointment. His Assistant Commissioners had to make appointments, but
we could go in and talk to Dr. Sencer.
As the epidemic unfolded, it was-- the burdens of work just multiplied, and we
really sought out his support, his guidance. His Deputy Commissioner was
[Joseph] Joe Giordano, [a] longstanding CDC Public Health Advisor, and the two
00:22:00of them were a pretty strong team. Dr. Sencer was really engaged in wanting to
share experiences or opportunities. I'll never forget: I was working late one
night in the health department office, and Dr. Sencer shows up. He said, hey,
come with me, we're going in the car to Gracie Mansion. Gracie Mansion is where
the Mayor of New York City resides, and at that time it was [Mayor Edward] Ed
Koch. The first cases of tampering with bottles of Tylenol had occurred, and, as
you may recall, I think it was like little needles or sharps had been placed in
these bottles. There was going to be a news conference at Gracie Mansion about
this. He said, get in the car. I sat in the back of the Green Room and watched
Koch and David Sencer engage with the press in an ad hoc press conference.
00:23:00
Another opportunity: there was a Public Broadcasting System [PBS] program called
3-2-1 Contact. It was very much an educational program but pitched to younger
kids. They had contacted the New York City Health Department because they wanted
to know, they were going to do a program on disease detectives -- and who could
Dr. Sencer recommend in Atlanta that they could speak to. He said, go no
farther. We have disease detectives here in New York City. So he got Polly and
me engaged in filming a sequence of the show that actually centered around one
of my early outbreaks, a hepatitis A outbreak in a pizzeria in New York City.
00:24:00They built up the story line about this, and the kids were customers at the
pizzeria. The kids, who were actually eighteen years of age but looked much
younger, all had scripts and dialog. They would set up the scene, and the kids
would say their lines, and then they'd say, okay, Polly, Mary. Roll 'em. We had
to ad hoc improvise this dialog. Thank you, Dr. Sencer, for some impromptu media
training. He was a fantastic mentor.
One final thought: I was retiring from CDC. I was actually being seconded to the
health department in London in the United Kingdom, and there was a retirement
party or a going-away party for me. I didn't know this, but Dr. Sencer had been
00:25:00invited. There was a presentation, speeches or whatever, and Dave Sencer got up
and presented me with a silver pin in the shape of an apple. He said, Ed Koch
gave me this pin, and I'm passing it on to you. It took my breath away. That's
the kind of guy Dave Sencer was.
MILLER: Great memories. In June of '82, just before you arrived in New York
City, the MMWR reported 355 cases of Kaposi sarcoma and serious opportunistic
infections in the United States occurring in previously health persons 15 to 60
00:26:00years old. Now, New York was reported as the state of residence for 51% of the
homosexual males, 49% of heterosexual males, and 46% of the 13 females. Can you
tell us a little bit about the atmosphere in the health department with regard
to this new disease? What was the early thinking as to its cause? What were they
hearing from clinicians managing these cases? What was it like then?
CHAMBERLAND: It was a pretty intense experience, because, as the figures that
you just recited indicate, New York City was a real epicenter for this new
disease. There was an intense amount of work associated with doing some of the
00:27:00very early investigations such as the case-control study and the lymphadenopathy
study that you worked on, Bess, with New York City clinicians. People were just
very committed to doing whatever they could to find out about what was going on.
It was still very early days. I think by '82, by the time I'd arrived, as a
result of the case-control study, people were really getting their heads around
the idea that this was looking like a sexually transmitted disease [STD]. It was
looking like hepatitis B in its modes of transmission. But it was still at a
time-- and it's hard to remember that there was a time when we really didn't
know for sure that transmission was occurring via heterosexual contact, via
transfusions of blood or factor VIII concentrate, or that there were cases
00:28:00occurring in children, pediatric cases.
Before I arrived, as I said, Dr. Sencer started as the health commissioner in
January of 1982. Within three months he established a meeting on a monthly
basis, the last Wednesday of the month, that was open to all of the clinicians
and academic researchers in the city. As you might imagine, obviously it was an
academic environment. People were pretty competitive; they were wanting to
publish about these new cases and whatever. But he was able to galvanize among
the academic and clinical community a real camaraderie. So they came. Fifty,
sixty of them would come every month to the health department, and the deal was
00:29:00that the health department would start each meeting with a summary of the
national statistics and the New York City statistics on cases. In turn, one of
the attendees from the clinical or research side of things would do a
presentation, and people would talk. They would share, hey, have you seen this?
We're seeing this.
It was a lot simpler time in terms of data analysis and presentation. The
analysis of cases was being done in New York City at that time manually, by
hand. We had our little calculators, and we tabulated and added up these
300-plus cases every month. We hand-drew epidemic curves and bar graphs. Polly's
00:30:00husband was an architect, and he had established a template for us, using that
very nice printing that architects somehow know how to do. I remember carefully
tracing his template to label the various graphs and figures that we had. It was
an invigorating but very intense period of time in New York City and with the
health department.
MILLER: It was still pretty early, and we know that it was a competitive
publish-or-perish environment. Was there a lot of fear at that time?
CHAMBERLAND: There was certainly fear that was palpable, I would say, in the
community at large, in the City of New York. As more information became
00:31:00available and the media started picking up on these stories, there was certainly
fear out there in the community about the transmissibility of the disease and
all sorts of wild ideas. Among people in the health department, the EIS officers
and a whole cadre of public health advisors that we worked with, I don't think
any of us were afraid. I remember talking to [Dr.] Donna Milvan, who was the
head of infectious diseases at Beth Israel Hospital, and this was a hospital
that was seeing a lot of cases of AIDS. She said that some of her newer house
staff or other house staff or people in the hospital were very fearful, and they
00:32:00said, you know, but we look at you, Donna -- and Donna was actually also
pregnant during this time --and she said, you go and you touch the patients, you
examine them. She said that, in her hospital at least, provided a lot of
reassurance to people. It was a time when there was a lot of not just fear but
stigma and discrimination associated with cases of AIDS. A diagnosis of AIDS for
some people meant the loss of their job, getting kicked out of their apartment,
losing their health insurance and the like. It was a time that again, is hard to
recall, because it now just seems so foreign an idea, since AIDS, sadly,
00:33:00regrettably, has become an established disease in the population. But in those
days it did engender in people a lot of fear.
MILLER: You had a lead role in developing and implementing the first AIDS
surveillance program in New York, and I believe this was the first in the U.S.
as well. Let's talk about that a bit. Just to start out, surveillance is the
basis of all work in public health. Can you tell us a little bit about what
surveillance means and the different types of surveillance, before we get into
some of the details of the one you worked on?
CHAMBERLAND: Sure. As you said, surveillance is essentially the tabulation of
cases of disease and following trends in disease. As you said, surveillance
00:34:00really underpins a lot of public health. It allows you to establish trends over
time. For various diseases you get to know if there is an increase in cases that
appears out of the ordinary. Surveillance for most diseases is of a passive
nature, which means public health authorities wait to hear about cases reported
by physicians or others. You get an alert physician or hospital infection
control nurse who calls you up and says, hey, we're seeing a lot of cases of
whatever; it seems kind of unusual. So it can serve, as I said, as an early
warning signal.
Surveillance for AIDS had been passive, and cases were being called in
00:35:00principally by physicians at the time, outpatient physicians as well as
hospital-based physicians. There were indications that a year into this already
we were seeing so-called "reporting fatigue." First of all, docs were really
busy, and to phone in a case of AIDS was probably a 15- to 20-minute phone
conversation to provide all of the information on a case report form that we
were collecting: demographic information, information about the disease,
testing, laboratory testing data about the opportunistic conditions, because
still at this time no virus had been discovered. We were seeing the period of
time begin to lengthen from when a case was first diagnosed to when it was
reported to the health department; three or more months were beginning to
elapse. Also, I think among physicians the novelty of it began to wear off ,and
00:36:00it was kind of acceptable, yes, this is now an established thing. Certainly,
mandatory reporting had not yet been established by the state health department.
For a variety of reasons, people in Atlanta, people in New York, were really
thinking that we needed to develop a more active approach to detecting and
reporting cases of AIDS. Hence, CDC awarded in September of 1982 the very first
cooperative agreement for active surveillance in the United States to the New
York City Health Department. It was for a whopping $150,000. The whole idea of
active surveillance is that, instead of passively waiting for a phone call, you,
00:37:00from the health department, go out and seek the cases. We spent a lot of time
figuring out how we would go about doing this. [James] Jim Monroe was a public
health advisor in New York City at the time, and he was the project director for
the cooperative agreement. I was the physician director. The money allowed us to
hire ultimately about six new public health advisors to staff up the office,
because basically it had been Jim Monroe and myself and Polly that were doing
all of AIDS case surveillance. Jim Allen was our Atlanta-based liaison, and Jim
spent a lot of time in New York. Together we hammered out a generic protocol.
00:38:00The idea would be that we would pilot active surveillance in a subset of New
York City hospitals for about six months, and then we would assess, revise as
needed, and broaden the sample, and then we would evaluate the system. After it
had been in place for about ten months, we would evaluate how complete active
case surveillance had been.
New York City has seventy-five hospitals. How do we go about selecting what we
thought would be fifteen? Jim, with his Hospital Infections Program background
in Atlanta, calls upon the Program, and a second-year EIS officer, [Dr. Steven]
Steve Solomon, was charged with pulling together an analysis of New York City
00:39:00hospitals for us. He produced this lovely ten-page report drawing on AIDS
statistics, American Hospital Association statistics, and he characterized the
hospitals. We knew already that the vast majority, about 75% of cases of AIDS,
were already being reported by a small number of hospitals, the big, large
teaching hospitals, about nine of them. While we wanted them to certainly form
the bulk of our pilot, we wanted to expand beyond that, because the question was
out there, hey, are there cases of AIDS occurring in smaller hospitals that are
just not being recognized, not being reported?
Ultimately, with Steve's help, we selected a sample of 15 hospitals. As I said,
most of them were the big teaching hospitals, but we had representation from
00:40:00hospitals in all five boroughs of New York. We had private hospitals, public
hospitals, and VA [Veterans Administration] hospitals in our sample size, and we
set off. We decided that it would be very important to visit personally each
hospital, and this is where Jim Allen was just invaluable. He was another one of
my fantastic mentors. With his background in hospital infection control, Jim
knew everybody in New York City. All of the infectious disease docs, infection
control people, the glitterati. Jim and I were going to a Memorial Sloan
Kettering meeting with [Dr. Donald] Don Armstrong, the head of ID [Infectious
00:41:00Disease]; Donna Mildvan at Beth Israel; and [Dr. Lewis] Lew Drusin at New York
Hospital. We would present the protocol and then figure out a way to tailor the
protocol to the specific hospital. At the end of the day in each of these active
hospitals, it was typically an infection control nurse who was designated within
the hospital to whom all the cases of AIDS should be reported. On our end at the
City Health Department, we identified a public health advisor who was their liaison.
For active surveillance to really work, the public health advisors would go out
to the hospital every week, meet with the infection control nurse, and assist in
the completion of the case report forms, because it often involved a lot of
medical record review to get the details of the information that were required
on the case report form. That was how active surveillance worked. We didn't
00:42:00completely want to ignore the remaining 60 hospitals, so we identified another
20 as what we termed "augmented passive" surveillance hospitals. The public
health advisors called the infection control nurses typically once a week, every
two weeks, but never went out on site to actually assist with case [report]
completion. Then we tried to raise awareness among all hospitals in New York
City through stories that we wrote in the monthly newsletter that the health
department put out. We had a continuing medical education lecture for all of the
infection control nurses in New York City and then the monthly meetings that I
mentioned earlier. That was another venue that we could get the word out about
case reporting.
MILLER: Sounds like it was a very impressive functional health department.
00:43:00
CHAMBERLAND: It was, and it's very interesting, because I hadn't appreciated it
at the time, but David Sencer took charge of the health department at a time
when the health department had really fallen on hard times. It had been
decimated. There had been really severe budget cuts, and I subsequently saw a
quote that Dr. Sencer -- attributed to Dr. Sencer because I guess a lot of his
peers thought he was crazy to take on the health department commissioner job
since it was in such dire straits. He said, when you're at your low point, this
is a good time to build. And that's what he did.
MILLER: What did you do for the case definition for this surveillance activity?
00:44:00This is done before the cause of the disease is known and you don't have the
virus, you don't have a test for it. You have a lot of diseases, but where do
you draw the line? How did you come upon a case definition?
CHAMBERLAND: The case definition had pretty much been established before I
arrived. I know that Polly had had interactions with some of the key clinicians
in New York City, and they had had discussions in New York City about a case
definition. But my recall is that for surveillance purposes a national case
definition had been more or less established that health departments were using.
It was, as you suggested, really based upon the diagnosis of a number of
00:45:00opportunistic infections or diseases. These conditions would not occur in an
individual with a normally functioning immune system, and they had to occur in
individuals who didn't have another reason or explanation for an immune
deficiency. Obviously, it excluded people that had cancers or some of these
classic immune deficiency diseases that had been described. We were using
diseases such as Kaposi's sarcoma and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, and as the
spectrum of diseases became better appreciated, more were added: CNS [central
nervous sytem] toxoplasmosis, cryptosporidiosis, Cryptococcus, etc. I know [Dr.]
00:46:00Richard Selik in particular and others in Atlanta were very careful to establish
diagnostic criteria for each of these conditions. It couldn't be, well, it
looked like a classic picture of Pneumocystis on an x-ray. There really was,
again, in these early days an effort made to use definitive methods of
diagnosis, be it biopsy or serology.
MILLER: As months and then a year or more passed, were new diseases added? Was
it a shifting case definition? Did that cause any problems in trying to assess trends?
CHAMBERLAND: Certainly as time went on, yes, conditions were added, and the AIDS
00:47:00case definition continued to evolve. For decades later the definition has
continued to evolve, as more information has become known and the availability
of virus testing and the like. It has always presented a challenge for analyzing
disease trends over time. I don't think it was a particular problem in '82 and
'83. Things were not shifting that dramatically then.
MILLER: You mentioned before that fortunately Polly's husband had some
architectural capabilities to help you with reporting. Tell us a little bit
more. This was still the era of paper-based reporting, the Stone Age to the
current EIS officers at CDC. How did that work? How did reports come in to the
00:48:00health department, to CDC Atlanta, and then how did you report out without just
having the advantage of pressing a button and having a nice report?
CHAMBERLAND: It was the age of paper and pencil. When I first arrived in New
York City, they were still using a case report form that was typed up on the IBM
Selectric typewriter. There were actually versions of this case report form that
were manually printed out, but I think it had progressed to the point where
there was a typewriter version of the case report form. As I said, prior to the
establishment of the active surveillance program, case reports were being called
in. You got a phone call, you were on the phone, and you wrote down the
information on the report form. Then, once a week, the forms were mailed to
00:49:00Atlanta, and not just by us, but by every health department in the United States
that was seeing cases. They were carefully reviewed, particularly by Richard
Selik at CDC, who was just an incredibly diligent reviewer of forms and a real
stickler for details. Inevitably, every week to ten days, we'd get a letter in
the mail from Richard, and in it, in Richard's perfect block printing style,
would be a series of questions about ten or fifteen cases that we had submitted:
You left this blank; can you specify what diagnostic criteria were used for
00:50:00this? It was hard work to make Richard happy. Sometimes the information just
didn't exist. So there was certainly that element of it.
We also, as I mentioned, we hand- tabulated the information; your basic
demographic breakdown, men, women, by risk group, and age group. We hand-drew
the bar graphs and the like. It wasn't until the beginning of 1983 that the
first Wangs, or word processing machines, arrived at the health department, and
it wasn't until later in 1983 that I think the cooperative agreement monies
allowed for CDC to provide the health department with a personal computer.
Pretty primitive times.
00:51:00
MILLER: What did you do about names in this reporting? Were you able to protect
the confidentiality of patients' names? Certainly to receive a diagnosis of AIDS
was very harmful to persons, as you described before. What did you do about names?
CHAMBERLAND: By the time I arrived, this was August 1982, my recall is that
name- based reporting was still very much in place, and so was the procedure,
not just for New York City but for all health departments. Somewhere along the
line a national case form became available, and we all began to use the same
form. The report form would have a patient's name on it, and we assigned a New
00:52:00York City ID number. Then these forms with names on them would be mailed in the
U.S. post to Atlanta. Then Atlanta would assign them a national case number.
Each case would have a national number and a city or state health department
number. This continued until probably sometime in early 1983, when issues about
confidentiality really started to percolate in New York City, but in other
places as well. Members of some of the community groups that were impacted were
clearly very worried. They were worried about the strength of confidentiality
00:53:00protection for this sensitive information. What levels of protection did a
health department or the federal government have, if you will, to resist
potential subpoenas or whatever for case names? There was a real concern about
this. In early 1983, the decision was made that the New York City Health
Department would black out the patient names on the case report forms, and we
would send the case report forms in an envelope to Atlanta, identified by a New
York City number. However, in a separate mailing we would include the New York
City case numbers linked to a name. Atlanta was still getting names, albeit not
00:54:00on an individual case report form, but they had the linkage.
One of the reasons for this was there was a real concern about duplicate
reporting. It was still at a time when there were probably close to a 1,000
cases of AIDS or so, but there was probably on a national level 10% to 20%
duplication of case reporting. Atlanta had figured that out, because patients
were mobile. For example, a patient might be diagnosed in his hometown and seek
care out in a place like New York or San Francisco, where there were obviously
many more clinicians familiar with the disease.
As the concerns became more vocal about this, Dr. Sencer called a meeting of the
health department Institutional Review Board (IRB). I remember I was at that
00:55:00meeting. Jim Allen came up from CDC Atlanta and David Sencer and others from the
health department, and we talked about the reasons why named-reporting certainly
was very essential for the New York City Health Department. Dr. Sencer made the
decision to establish a subcommittee of the IRB that was called the
Confidentiality Committee. It would include members of the health department,
but also it would include members from each of the affected communities. There
was representation from some of the gay men in the community, IV [intravenous]
drug users, Haitians, transfusion recipients, etc. A series of meetings began in
May and continued on through the summer.
At the first meeting, the community groups presented their concerns, and there
00:56:00were several. They were very concerned about the flow of information from the
health department to CDC, and obviously, the reporting of names to the federal
government. They were also very concerned about just case reporting in general
and the idea that this sensitive information was being collected as part of a
routine case report. For many of them, they thought that informed consent was
needed from the patient to consent to the reporting of this case. This was
connected to the idea, is surveillance research, and if it is, certainly
informed consent would be required. They were also very concerned about
reporting by name to the health department; they didn't clearly understand why
00:57:00that would be needed or would be helpful. At subsequent meetings we worked
through some of these issues. I think it was about the third meeting or so, in
very early July of 1983, Dr. Sencer announced at the start of the meeting that
by executive order, with immediate effect, the health department would no longer
be sending names at all to CDC. All case report forms would go with a New York
City number and no subsequent name reporting.
It was in a very short period of time, two to three weeks later actually, that
on a national basis a new system of reporting was established. On a national
level names were no longer being sent to CDC; a system referred to as Soundex,
which was an alphanumeric way of coding people's names, [was used]. The code
00:58:00began with the first letter of someone's last name, and then there were these
very arcane rules for how you transformed consonants and whatever into numbers
or letters. That actually was done manually. The coding of names was done by our
public health advisors. Obviously, over time, computer algorithms could be used
or whatever. So it was in 1983 that name reporting on a national level stopped.
The health department made its case, however, that name reporting was still, to
the City, very important. We emphasized that case reporting was not a static
thing. The receipt of a case report was not where things ended. As new diagnoses
00:59:00became available or patients died, we needed to update case status and whatever,
and that required a name to be able to do that. One further step that was taken
by Dr. Sencer was to amend the health code so that AIDS case reports were
afforded the same level of confidentiality protection as were cases of sexually
transmitted diseases and information about substance abuse. They had a higher
level of protection, and the code was amended to include AIDS cases in that same category.
MILLER: You've mentioned many times the public health advisors. CDC has a long
history of placing assignees, and they were usually in that cadre of public
01:00:00health advisors to state and local health departments, to assist with disease
detection and control. Over many decades this was primarily immunizations,
tuberculosis programs, and sexually transmitted disease programs. I think they
started placing public health advisors for this new syndrome very early on in
the process, maybe late '81. Can you tell us a little bit more about this
grouping? You've mentioned them for different projects, but it sounds like they
were quite a presence in New York City.
CHAMBERLAND: The public health advisors, they made surveillance work. Much of
the AIDS activities in New York City was very much as a result of their hard
01:01:00work, their know-how, their technical expertise. I think some of it might have
reflected that in Atlanta -- and I think this was also replicated in many health
departments -- that the initial investigations about cases of this new disease
came about as an outgrowth of the sexually transmitted disease sections of
health departments and certainly here in Atlanta at CDC. Early members of the
task force, the core members, were drawn from CDC's sexually transmitted
diseases group, and the public health advisors played a very prominent role in
tracking cases of sexually transmitted diseases and their contacts. This was a
01:02:00very helpful skill to have in trying to track down cases of AIDS, and as we
began to investigate in more detail unusual cases of AIDS, the public health
advisors were just great at doing this.
And their training-- They had a lot of interview skills and techniques. They
were very good at being able to put patients at ease to share very sensitive and
confidential information. The ones that I worked with in New York City, many of
them came from the STD [programs], but as our staff grew, many of them came from
immunizations [programs at CDC and state and local health departments], and from
tuberculosis [programs at CDC and health departments]. Jim Monroe was just a
01:03:00standout. He was the lead public health advisor at the health department -- I
think he had come from immunizations [program]-- and they made things work. I
learned a lot from the public health advisors, because I didn't know any of this.
MILLER: What were the key findings of the surveillance activity in New York City
from your perspective? With the benefit of 35 years of experience, how do you
look at it now?
CHAMBERLAND: As I mentioned, after we implemented active surveillance and it had
been in place for about ten months, we felt it was important to validate that
system. To validate the system, you have to utilize a different method than your
case finding. We validated the system in 12 of the 15 pilot active surveillance
hospitals and in three of the augmented passive surveillance hospitals. Again,
01:04:00similar to when we had implemented active surveillance, we went and visited
every hospital and spoke with heads of departments from microbiology to
pathology and hematology. The whole idea was to find the diagnostic records for
a subset of the opportunistic conditions. We selected six of them: Kaposi's
sarcoma, Pneumocystis pneumonia, toxoplasmosis, Cryptococcus, cryptosporidiosis
and atypical mycobacterium. We looked at a period of time before we had
implemented active surveillance and then after. Hospitals didn't have
computerized records either, so this meant combing through pieces of paper,
01:05:00laboratory slips, laboratory reports, pathology reports, and log books. We hired
three or four professional medical record technicians, and each of them went
with the designated public health advisor to that particular hospital and in one
month went through 350,000 pieces of paper in these fifteen hospitals. We had
developed a typewritten data collection form, and we had all agreed that for
confidentiality to be strictly maintained, personal identifiers would never
leave the hospital, nor would the health department bring its personal
identifiers, its case files to the hospital.
01:06:00
The way things worked is, we had developed a prototype spreadsheet, if you will,
on a legal piece of paper, a big piece of paper, where initially the record
technicians would record a patient's name and accession number, medical record
number, every time they found one of these diagnoses, [as well as] record some
additional information. Then, the public health advisor for that hospital would
pick up the telephone and call a contact in the New York City surveillance
office. Over the phone they would try and reconcile records to see if this
patient with a diagnosis in this hospital of Kaposi's sarcoma had previously
been reported to [the] health department. It was time consuming, because
sometimes the demographic details didn't quite match and sometimes it had been
reported from another hospital, whatever. All of this was done over the phone,
01:07:00the matching. Every night, the technicians would hand in these legal-size pieces
of paper to a designated point of contact in the hospital, who would lock them
up. Every morning they'd be unlocked. When we finished at a particular hospital,
the identifying information had been recorded on the left-hand side of the piece
of paper. We literally took scissors and we cut the left-hand side of the piece
of paper off and left with the hospital the names and medical record numbers,
with no indication to them whether or not these were indeed cases of AIDS. We
left with the right-hand side of the paper, which had the New York City case number.
Our findings demonstrated that prior to active surveillance being established,
there actually had been pretty complete reporting, 90-plus percent. It improved
01:08:00with active case reporting, and also what dramatically improved was shortening
the period of time from diagnosis to case report. I think it ended up we went
from about 50% to 75% being reported within one month. Also, the process of
active surveillance recovered a whole backlog of cases that had been somewhat
incomplete or whatever and were just in a holding pattern. It verified that
among the active surveillance hospitals, we really were seeing most of the
cases, and even in the modified passive surveillance hospitals, we were getting
most of the cases. That was good news.
It also verified that [for] these smaller hospitals that we had included in the
01:09:00pilot that weren't reporting a lot of cases, that was actually true. We didn't
uncover any new cases. It set the pattern, and for many years active
hospital-based surveillance became the national norm. It made sense at the time,
because most patients ended up in a hospital as their AIDS progressed and they
required treatment for these opportunistic diseases. Obviously, as
antiretroviral therapy became available and AIDS essentially became a chronic
disease, this type of surveillance system doesn't work. It's been changed
dramatically over the decades, but at that point in time a hospital-based system
was pretty effective in capturing cases.
MILLER: Moving away from the surveillance, you also did work, for example, on
AIDS in prisoners in New York City, Rikers Island. Do you want to tell us a
01:10:00little bit about that? I think you actually did develop a surveillance system
for the prison also.
CHAMBERLAND: We did, we did. I had several encounters with
Rikers Island. The first was a Dr. Sencer Special. I was in my office, and Dr.
Sencer came in, completely unannounced, ad hoc. Mary, I need you to go to Rikers
Island. The guards are kind of agitating. They are really concerned about
getting AIDS from the prisoners. I've arranged for a car, and you're going to go
over to Rikers with people from the Department of Corrections, the medical
director. "Really? Okay. What am I going to do?" "You're just going to inspect
the place and reassure everybody." So, I got in the car. It's summer, I was
thinking, oops, wardrobe malfunction. I was wearing sort of a sundress. It had
01:11:00sleeves and it was long, but it had slits on either side, big slits. This was
not what I would choose to wear to Rikers Island, but there was no time for a
change of clothes. So, we drove over Rikers Island bridge to get to the prison,
and what an eye opener. We were in an official Department of Corrections car. We
got stopped, and the car was searched. Security personnel pulled out the back
seat of the car, they opened up the trunk, they looked under the car. Each of us
was patted down; we were frisked just to make sure that we were not bringing any
contraband into the prison. We got there, and I was asked to tour the facility.
AIDS patients at the time: they had at any given time two, three, or four
01:12:00prisoners with AIDS, and they were always in the infirmary. I looked at the
infirmary and met with the infirmary staff and went through how they were
dealing with issues that might involve blood and body fluid contact; how they
managed laundry and drinking and eating utensils and the like. I went and saw
other parts of the prison, such as the day room and the exercise area. It was
pretty sobering. To get to different parts of the prison required the guards to
unlock a series of two or three doors, one right after the other. They had these
big key rings with keys that unlocked each of these doors. The doors would slam
01:13:00shut, and I remember thinking, Oh wow, this is really chilling. Talk about being
deterred from any thought of a life of crime. It was a very stark, chilling
environment. So the guards -- we had a number of recommendations to make: no,
you didn't need to wear gowns and gloves when you drove a prisoner in a prison
van. No, you didn't need to do special things with the laundry or the eating
utensils. So things quieted down.
We did work with the Department of Corrections and established an active system
of surveillance at the prison, as well as a couple of the hospitals that treated
prisoners when they required medical care. I also had a second visit to Rikers
about a year later, when the guards, as well as the residents of Queens, were
01:14:00very agitated about the prospect of mosquito-borne transmission of AIDS. The
thinking was if AIDS is transmitted by syringe and needle, how is that different
from a mosquito biting a prisoner who has AIDS and then flying over the East
River into Queens and biting a resident of Queens or biting one of the guards in
the exercise yard? The guards were wanting all prisoners with AIDS to be indoors
at all time. That was another interesting visit to Rikers.
MILLER: How did you address that concern? There was a study on that in Belle
Glade, Florida. Had that been done by the time you went to Rikers?
CHAMBERLAND: No. This was all pre-Belle Glade. I remember we asked CDC Atlanta
for help in pulling together a statement or documentation. It was pretty
01:15:00minimalistic: to our knowledge, no, cases of [AIDS] would be unlikely. It wasn't
the level of scientific rigor that you would like. That would come much later,
as you said, with the studies that took place in Florida, where they actually
looked at the ability of various insects to transmit AIDS, which obviously was
not a mode of transmission.
MILLER: You were working quite a bit in uncharted territory here.
CHAMBERLAND: We were, we were. It was, as I said, it's hard to remember a time
when these were viewed as real concerns and questions about modes of
transmission. We were always looking for potential new modes of transmission,
and a lot of that was happening in New York City. The first cases of pediatric
01:16:00AIDS were described in New York City. I remember visiting with Polly Thomas, who
was a pediatrician, [Dr.] Arye Rubinstein in the Bronx in November of 1982. He
sat down and described ten kids with disease, severe immunodeficiency, unlike
anything that he had ever seen before. Infants, young children born to mothers,
most of whom were IV drug users. What was this all about? It wasn't anything
that had been previously described. We got calls from the infectious disease
team at Montefiore [Hospital], also in the Bronx. They treated a large number of
IV drug user AIDS patients, and [they were] calling up and saying, Hey, we have
these women [who] swear on a stack of bibles they don't shoot drugs, but they
have husbands or sexual partners who shoot drugs. Could this be heterosexually
01:17:00transmitted? We worked with [Dr.] Dale Lawrence at the end of 1982,
investigating one of the very early cases of transfusion AIDS. This was about
the time that the first MMWR came out about transfusion AIDS. These were all, as
you say, uncharted territory, figuring out what this disease [was] and who the
populations at risk were.
MILLER: As you look back on it, how did you experience all of that? Was it
exciting? Was it anxiety provoking? What was your feeling about all of that
work? It was so unique.
CHAMBERLAND: At the time, I'm almost embarrassed to say I found it exciting. I
was a brand-new EIS officer, a real newbie. Hey, not too many people have
brand-new epidemics drop on their doorstep with a new reveal. It seemed almost
01:18:00every week there was something new going on in New York or somewhere else. It
was really incredibly exciting to get to work with such a wonderful team of
investigators, both in the City, the clinicians and the investigators in the
City, as well as people in Atlanta. Honestly, it was only decades later that I
really came to appreciate the enormity of what was unfolding. I had really no
idea. Thank goodness there were smarter people like Jim Curran, Harold Jaffe and
others, who really, quite early on I think, saw where this was going. They saw
that this was not going to go away, that it was going to be a disease that would
01:19:00establish itself and become entrenched. I didn't have any of that insight in
those days. I look back and it is with profound humility and a sense of real
gratitude that I was able to be at a good place at a good time with good people.
MILLER: There's one more group I wanted to ask you about. During this period,
mid '82 to '83, the risk groups for the syndrome appeared to be, as you've
mentioned, homosexual or bisexual men, intravenous drug abusers and their
partners. Confusingly, Haitians, and those receiving blood or blood products
were beginning to be recognized, but there was always a group with so-called no
01:20:00identified risk. You were involved in investigating this category and later
directing a national surveillance and investigations for these [cases]. Can you
tell us about those? It's sort of a basket category. Was that a large group, and
what can you tell us about it?
CHAMBERLAND: There was a keen interest in the so-called "no identified risk
cases;" cases that were reported without the already identified risk factors
that you mentioned. A lot of energy and effort was spent, both in New York City
and then nationally, in investigating these cases. The concern being, are there
other modes of transmission that we don't know about that we should uncover? The
01:21:00proportion of overall cases of AIDS that fell into this group pretty much
settled out at about 5% of the cases. Maybe in the early days it was 10%. It was
never a big proportion of cases. When you analyzed the data, the vast majority
of these cases had demographic characteristics that were very similar to the
major risk groups. There were a lot of white males, young white males, and also
individuals that demographically looked like and provided you with information
that made you suspect that potentially drug use had been involved. I was
involved in a number of investigations in New York City, most of them centered
01:22:00around transfusion cases.
When I left New York City and came to Atlanta and, as you said, worked on the
national surveillance of no identified risk cases, I had a number of interesting
cases that we assisted state health departments with. There was, gosh, I think
it was in 1986 that we were contacted by the U.S. military because the Armed
Forces had suspended distribution of a lot of RhoGAM [Rho(D) immune globulin].
This is Rh immune factor that's given to women who are pregnant who do not have
an Rh antibody. If the child they are carrying does, it can set up an immune
reaction and be very detrimental to the unborn fetus or the infant after its
01:23:00birth. RhoGAM was an immune globulin product made from pooled plasma from lots
of donors, thousands of donors. An active-duty woman had been identified during
routine testing for AIDS that the military had instituted of all of its
active-duty personnel. She turned up positive, and it was a month after she had
received this injection of RhoGAM during her pregnancy. They got very concerned,
and out of what we would now say an abundance of caution decided to just
discontinue use of the lot. This resulted in a series of phone calls with CDC
and the FDA and the manufacturer of the product and the U.S. military.
It was decided that CDC was invited to participate in the epidemiologic
01:24:00investigation aspect. I was sent to a military base in the United States to
interview this woman. She was amazingly cooperative. I was able to establish a
good rapport with her, and she was very open to me about the full extent of the
answers to questions that I posed to her about potential ways that she could
have acquired the infection. She honestly had no idea about potential exposures
that could have resulted in transmission of the virus to her. In addition to the
interview with her, I reviewed her medical records and the records of her
infant, and other clues started to emerge. Ultimately, this was a fairly
01:25:00complicated investigation that required the assistance of a couple of state
health departments. We accrued enough data where we felt very confident that we
had identified a risk factor for this woman.
This was ultimately published in the MMWR. It was a fairly brief report, but we
felt compelled to publish it, because word had percolated out and people started
to express concerns about these pooled plasma products. As we noted in the MMWR,
a detailed investigation had identified a probable risk factor for this woman,
and that's where things were left. To my knowledge, there were no additional
problems with the use of RhoGAM or whatever. This was one of the more
interesting and one of the more satisfying investigations, because so many times
these investigations led to dead ends. You had strong suspicions about a risk
01:26:00factor, but you couldn't nail it down.
As you might imagine, the military had a lot of trouble finding risk factors
among cases that occurred in its population. As I said, they had an active
program of testing for HIV [human immunodeficiency virus] among all active-duty
personnel. They would report cases among their personnel to the national
surveillance system. We had a lot of no identified risk cases in the military,
and they demographically looked very similar to some of our major risk groups.
I'll never forget-- I had established a lot of contacts with some of the
military public health people that were responsible for these investigations and
01:27:00for doing surveillance and epidemiologic studies among their populations. They
were just really frustrated by their inability to get risk factor information.
I was invited to come to the Pentagon and talk to them about how we did no
identified risk investigations nationally and in local and state health
departments. I remember that there was a big discussion before I went. Jim
Curran was involved and others about whether Mary should wear a uniform to the
Pentagon, because by this time the wearing of Public Health Service uniforms had
been instituted. We were doing it on Wednesday of every week, I think [that] was
uniform day. I was petrified. Please, please, no. I don't want to go to the
01:28:00Pentagon wearing a uniform. I'm not at all versed on military protocol, and
people will be saluting me and I'll have no idea what to do. The decision was
made: don't wear the uniform. I remember checking in to the Pentagon, going
through the security screening and the metal detector. I was met by one of the
people that I worked with, and he was pretty high ranking. He said, Oh, I see
you didn't wear your uniform. I said, Yes, there was a lot of talk about that,
and [it was] decided I shouldn't." He said, It's probably not a bad idea. You're
going to be meeting with a lot of high-level people, generals, , very-high
ranking people. At the time I probably was a Lieutenant Commander or Commander,
so [Department of Defense Pay Grade] 0-4 or 0-5. And the way things, I later
learned, in the military, the way they work is people just look at how many
01:29:00stripes you have on your shoulder board. They said to me, If you'd gone in
wearing a uniform with such a low rank, they would have immediately discounted
anything that you had to say, because you would just not have been viewed as a
senior-enough person. But coming, as you will, as a civilian with this supposed
expertise in no identified risk investigations, at least I was able to get their
attention and be able to chat with them about their situation.
MILLER: Through these various circumstances, did you get involved with the press
at all during your experiences?
CHAMBERLAND: I did, and boy, it was trial by fire, learn by doing. And not doing
01:30:00a very good job of it, I might say. You didn't get media training. I think now
EIS officers get media training-- no, no. Again, Dr. Sencer came into my office
one day and said, "Mary, there's an interview with one of the local major
affiliates." I don't know, NBC or ABC had scheduled an interview with Dr. Sencer
about AIDS, an update on AIDS. He said, I can't do it. Something's come up, so
I'm going to have you do the interview. Really? So [it was] another wardrobe
malfunction study. It was another summer day, and I was wearing this polo shirt,
one of the Lacoste polo shirts that were popular at the time, white, and some
sort of skirt. I was taken to a room in the health department where they
typically filmed these interviews. This very New York City newswoman came in and
01:31:00said, I'm looking for Dr. Chamberland, and I said, That would be me. And she
said, Oh. She of course was dressed to the nines; high heels, very hip. She
proceeded to look me over from toe to head at what I was wearing, and she turned
to her cameraman and she said, Just shoot her from the neck up. I really
obviously needed to get my act together in terms of wardrobe. I was actually
surprised when I went back in preparation for this interview and I looked at
some of my monthly reports that I was submitting every month to the Field
Services Division. Every month there were numerous interviews with the New York
Times, Bill Moyers, the New York Native, whatever.
01:32:00
But there's one more story. I think by this time I was in Atlanta, and I was
scheduled to do a presentation at the Third International AIDS Conference in
Washington, D.C. I guess this was about 1987, maybe. I was doing a presentation
on heterosexual cases of AIDS. [These were] heterosexuals who had no use of
drugs, the so-called "heterosexual contact" cases. Most of these were cases
among partners of IV drug users or individuals with other risk factors. But
there were some that we didn't have any other kind of known exposure. There was
a growing sort of drumbeat among the so-called "general population" about what
their risk of AIDS might be, and this almost hysteria that was beginning to
percolate along about the risk of AIDS to all heterosexuals. I was doing a
01:33:00pretty straightforward surveillance data presentation on this particular group
of individuals. I was in my hotel room, and it was the morning of my
presentation. I was getting ready and I had the television on, and it was one of
those morning news programs, Today Show, whatever. The news report came on, and
I was getting ready, and I heard "and today federal health officials are going
to be reporting about the growing cases of heterosexual transmission among the
U.S. population." I listened to it, and I realized, they're quoting data from my
abstract. I thought, Oh my gosh, I think he's talking about my presentation.
Needless to say, this was a little worrying. I did the presentation, but
afterwards I remember being surrounded by a scrum of media. Good ol' Kent
01:34:00Taylor, who was from the CDC office, as it was called then Office of Public
Affairs, was at the conference. Kent was a really big guy, over six feet. Kent
came over and just literally ran interference for me and got me out of a
situation that I was clearly being overwhelmed by. So, not so memorable media.
MILLER: In closing, I just would like to ask you a few questions about the
personal aspects or impact of this work on you. You were a part of something
that changed the history and course of public health. How has that affected you
personally, would you say?
CHAMBERLAND: As I said earlier, it's only with the passage of time, decades,
that I've been able to look back and realize what I was a part of. [I had] a
01:35:00pretty small part but something that I was very privileged to be a part of. I
look back with enormous gratitude to so many people that took the time to mentor
me and to show me the ropes and provide me with skills that I continue to use to
this day. I remember sending first drafts of manuscripts about no identified
risk cases or about the surveillance system in New York City to Jim Curran, and
they would come back-- these were typewritten manuscripts, no word processing--
with red ink all over them. Jim always started off his comments with "good
start," and then what followed was a long list of "I think you should do this;
01:36:00try this; shorten, but add more data." I just remember being so taken aback by
all of this, but obviously, with people that take the time to spend on a
manuscript like that, you learn. Again, it was only with the passage of time,
when I found myself being a supervisor to a very junior epidemiologist, [that I]
realized the hours of time it took to really go through a first draft of a
manuscript and provide comments that would be constructive to the individual in
developing the next draft. It certainly gave me a great start for my career
skills that I continue to hone and use for years after.
It also left with me a very great sense of the value of teamwork, because I
01:37:00think so much of public health is teamwork. Despite some of the jostling with
the academics in New York City, who were certainly out there to publish or
perish, through Dr. Sencer's efforts, through the efforts of people here at CDC,
I think we came to realize that AIDS was bigger than any one of us. It was
really only through an intense collaboration and teamwork that we were going to
be able to solve this, to make some progress in this. It affected me profoundly,
and still does, for my career in public health to have been exposed to this at
such a young and tender age.
01:38:00
MILLER: Any closing thoughts, Mary?
CHAMBERLAND: No, I think you've done a great job of pulling out some of the
stories. It was, as I said, an exciting time, and it speaks a lot to the value
of public health, to the scientific method. The fact that we really were able to
elucidate the epidemiology of this disease before a causative agent was
discovered, before a test was available. The epidemiology was pretty much mapped
out, as were the early guidelines and recommendations about prevention of this
disease. They really stood the test of time. It says a lot about the power of epidemiology.
MILLER: Thanks, Mary.
01:39:00
END.
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