Global Health Chronicles

Dr. Thomas Spira

David J. Sencer CDC Museum, Global Health Chronicles

 

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00:00:54 - Background/education

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Partial Transcript: Let's begin a little bit with your background.

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about growing up in Detroit, Michigan and what drew him to study medicine and immunology.

Keywords: A. Martin Lerner; Chicago, Illinois; Czechoslovakia; Detroit, Michigan; archaeologist; genetics; homosexual; infectious disease; medical school

Subjects: Acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS); Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC); Michael Reese Hospital; University of Chicago; University of Michigan; Wayne State University; medicine; pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP)

00:04:09 - Interest in immunology

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Partial Transcript: Somewhere along the line it looks like you did an immunobiology fellowship at Memorial Sloan Kettering.

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about how his early interest in acquired immuniodeficiency diseases primed him to work on a disease like AIDS.

Keywords: A. Nahmias; D. Gordon; Emory Clinic; Grady Hospital; J. Oleske; Memorial Sloan Kettering; New York, New York; Newark, New Jersey; R. Good; S. Schwartzman; acquired immunodeficiency diseases; hematology; host factors division; immunobiology; immunology division; infectious disease; pathology; pediatric AIDS; pediatric immunodeficiency

00:06:55 - Decision to go to CDC

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Partial Transcript: What actually made you decide to go to CDC?

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about his decision to work at CDC in the Bureau of Laboratories.

Keywords: Bureau of Epidemiology; Bureau of Labs; Commissioned officers' residency deferment (CORD)

Subjects: CDC; Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS); National Institutes of Health (NIH); U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS)

00:08:17 - Initial reactions to AIDS

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Partial Transcript: So what was your initial reaction as you're starting to work on this new disease?

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about his early intuitions about the causes of what would become known as AIDS and studies examining the effects of nitrous oxide. He also describes the general excitement at CDC to work with the Task Force.

Keywords: Cincinnati, Ohio; Hepatitis B; Immunodeficiency; Legionnaire's disease; MSM; Morgantown, West Virginia; Office of Management and Budget; blood transfusions; hemophiliac; nitrous oxide; poppers

Subjects: CDC; National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH); epidemic

00:10:59 - Early Task Force days

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Partial Transcript: So in the very early days, weeks and moths when CDC started working on what was the Task Force just after June of '81…

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about his early interest in what would become known as AIDS and his role as the sole immunologist in the Task Force.

Keywords: D. Gordon; L. Martin; M. Hubbard; S. McDougal; Task Force; immunodeficiency; opportunistic infection; pneumocystis

Subjects: AIDS; CDC; Emory University; Epidemiology; Kaposi's Sarcoma (KS); PCP

00:13:46 - Lab aspects of disease

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Partial Transcript: How did CDC organize people working on lab aspects of this disease?

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about different types of laboratorians involved in the early work on AIDS and his involvement in the first case control study.

Keywords: Atlanta, GA; D. Francis; E. Ewing; F. Chandler; G. Noble; P. Feorino; Phoenix, Arizona; Task Force; case control study; immunology; laboratorian; pathologist

Subjects: CDC; virology

00:16:13 - First case control study/state of clinical immunology

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Partial Transcript: You mentioned the case control study and that was sort of a big event for you…

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about studies on CD4 and CD8 cells and the state of clinical immunology lab technology at the time. He also talks about handling biological specimens and his early intuitions about what was causing the disease.

Keywords: Atlanta, GA; Beth Israel Hospital; CD 4 cells; CD 8 cells; D. Bregman; D. Mildvan; H. Jaffe; IV drug user; Immunology; Los Angeles, CA; M. Guinan; MSM; New York, New York; P. Drotman; San Francisco, CA; T lymphoctyes; blood; case control study; flow cytometry; gay men; immunodeficiency; immunoglobulin; lymphadenopathy syndrome; lymphocyte; opportunistic infection; pneumocystis; statistician; virologist

Subjects: AIDS; CDC; PCP; virology

00:25:07 - CDC collaboration with other agencies and organizations

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Partial Transcript: So some of the academic centers and, of course, NIH, were working on the immunology of this disease as well.

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about CDC's collaboration with organizations like NIH, WHO, Institute Pasteur, and Robert Koch Institute. He also talks about CDC's contribution to the fields of immunology and epidemiology as a result of AIDS and the reluctance of blood groups to acknowledge there was an infectious agent in blood.

Keywords: Berlin, Germany; Hamburg, Germany; Institute Pasteur; J. Bove; L. Montagnier; M. Seligmann; Munich, Germany; P. Racz; Paris, France; Retrovirus; Robert Koch Institute; Tropical Medicine Institute; blood bank; blood transfusion; immunologist; immunology; pathologist

Subjects: CDC; Kaposi's Sarcoma (KS); NIH; National Cancer Institute (NCI); World Health Organization (WHO); Yale; epidemic; epidemiology

00:31:36 - Personal sentiment over AIDS work

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Partial Transcript: You were fairly young.

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about the excitement surrounding AIDS work at CDC and his unique experiences as a laboratorian during this time.

Keywords: Atlanta, GA; Budapest, Hungary; Florence AIDS meeting; International Immunology Conference; pediatric cases

Subjects: AIDS; CDC; human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)

00:32:43 - Involvement with pediatric cases

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Partial Transcript: You also worked on pediatric cases

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about the differences of his work on pediatric AIDS cases compared to Haitian AIDS patients.

Keywords: A. Pitchenik; A. Rubenstein; Bronx, New York; G. Dickinson; G. Scott; Haitian; IV drug user; J. Oleske; Lymphadenopathy Associated Virus (LAV); M. Fischl; Miami, Florida; Morbidity Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR); New York City Health Department; New York, New York; P. Thomas; SUNY Downstate Medical Center; pediatric HIV/AIDS

Subjects: Albert Einstein College of Medicine; Cornell University; HIV; University of Miami

00:36:06 - Work with Haitian populations

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Partial Transcript: You talk about your work with Haitians and primarily Florida, but I guess they were also in New York.

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about collaborating with people in Brooklyn and Miami to conduct studies on Haitian AIDS patients. He also talks about the negative effects of classifying Haitians as a risk group.

Keywords: Africa; Brooklyn, New York; Gay related immuno-deficiency (GRID); Haitian; IV drug user; MSM; Miami, Florida; P. Drotman; hemophiliac; pathologist

Subjects: CDC; HIV

00:39:42 - Study of lymphadenopathy syndrome

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Partial Transcript: One of your major efforts in the early years was studying patients with lymphadenopathy syndrome…

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about why he chose to study lymphadenopathy syndrome in patients and the emotional aspects of seeing AIDS patients during the early years.

Keywords: Atlanta, GA; D. Fishbein; J. Kaplan; MSM; New York, New York; R. Janssen; San Francisco, CA; antiretroviral; homosexual men; lymphadenopathy syndrome; opportunistic infection; viral load

Subjects: AIDS; CDC; Food and Drug Administration (FDA); HIV; Kaposi's Sarcoma (KS); NIH

00:46:24 - Advancement in drug therapies

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Partial Transcript: So this went on and then the virus was identified and then slowly there began to be treatment protocols.

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about advancements in drug therapies and the lack of scientist concern over risk for acquiring the disease. He also talks about Public Health Service protocol to screen for the AIDS virus in public health workers.

Keywords: AZT; ziduvudine

Subjects: AIDS; HIV

00:48:18 - Animal model studies

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Partial Transcript: You worked also with colleagues, I think you mentioned this, to try and find an infectious causative agent in lymph node biopsies.

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about the use of chimpanzees and marmosets to find a causative agent in lymph nodes.

Keywords: chimpanzee; electron microscopist; immune deficiency; marmoset; pathologist; virologist

Subjects: CDC

00:51:29 - Effects of AIDS on labs

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Partial Transcript: Okay. So looking at the lab in general, how would you say the early work on AIDS affected the labs?

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about the growth of immunology, pathology, and virology labs under the demands of AIDS. He also talks about lack of laboratorian concern for contracting the disease.

Keywords: L. Martin; MSM; immunology; pathology; virology

Subjects: AIDS

00:54:43 - Retrospective thoughts on CDC's response

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Partial Transcript: So looking back again now from a number of years later, are there any aspects of CDC's response where you feel that we fell short or could've don’t a better job?

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira praises CDC and the Task Force for their good work on AIDS.

Keywords: H. Jaffe; J. Curran; Task force; sexually transmitted diseases group

Subjects: CDC; epidemiology

00:56:06 - Personal impact of work on AIDS

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Partial Transcript: Well, in closing, I'd like to ask a few more questions about the personal spects or impact of your work on AIDS.

Segment Synopsis: Dr. Spira talks about his current international programmatic work on AIDS and his gratitude for having been involved in HIV/AIDS work from the beginning.

Keywords: Central Asia; D. Birx; IV drug users; Kenya; Mozambique; Tanzania; Ukraine; Washington, DC; antiretroviral treatment; immunodeficiency

Subjects: AIDS; HIV; President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR); US Public Health Service (USPHS); WHO; epidemic; public health