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Description: In this video we explore the pivotal early years of the AIDS epidemic in the United States — focusing on the work of journalist Randy Shilts, the intersections of gay sex, blood transfusion, public health failure, and ethics in medicine. Join me as we examine how Shilts’s 1980s reporting (which culminated in his landmark book And the Band Played On) revealed the devastating human cost of delayed governmental and medical responses, the stigma faced by gay men, and the bioethical questions that still resonate today: How did homophobia and institutional inertia contribute to the spread of HIV? What role did blood-transfusion and “unknown” STD risks play in transmitting HIV early on? From a bioethics perspective: how should scarce medical resources have been allocated? What responsibilities did the media and public health agencies have? This video is ideal for pre-medical students, bioethics classes, LGBTQ history courses, and anyone curious about how one crisis reshaped public health. ⚠️ Trigger warning: The content covers death, illness, and discrimination during the early AIDS crisis.