Rampant : How a city stopped a plague /

In November 1982, a young man walked into St Vincent's hospital, Sydney, complaining of simple symptoms - fever, fatigue, sweats. Not much was known about the virus he was carrying. Its name was still being debated. Its cause was a mystery. Its cure had yet to be found. It has still to be found...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Chapman, Penny (Producer), Pitt, Victoria (Director)
Format: Video
Language:English
Language Notes:In English.
Published: Ultimo, New South Wales : ABC Commercial, 2007.
Series:Australasian video online
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to this streaming video (Alexander Street Press)
Description
Summary:In November 1982, a young man walked into St Vincent's hospital, Sydney, complaining of simple symptoms - fever, fatigue, sweats. Not much was known about the virus he was carrying. Its name was still being debated. Its cause was a mystery. Its cure had yet to be found. It has still to be found. In time, like 50 million others around the world, he died of the disease. He was the first person diagnosed with AIDS in Australia. As news of his diagnosis spread, health experts prepared the country for deaths on an extraordinary scale - parallels with the Black Death were almost irresistible. A plague, an apocalypse lay ahead. Twenty-five years on, this is the story of how wrong, and how right they were.
Item Description:Title from resource description page (viewed Apr. 15, 2014).
Physical Description:1 online resource (57 min.).
Playing Time:00:57:03