{"id":20200,"date":"2020-12-01T11:00:04","date_gmt":"2020-12-01T16:00:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=20200"},"modified":"2024-12-19T11:06:06","modified_gmt":"2024-12-19T16:06:06","slug":"education-in-the-eighties-preserving-hiv-aids-audiovisuals","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2020\/12\/01\/education-in-the-eighties-preserving-hiv-aids-audiovisuals\/","title":{"rendered":"Education in the Eighties: Preserving HIV\/AIDS Audiovisuals"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Sarah Eilers ~<\/em><\/p>\n

This year, the Historical Audiovisuals Program<\/a> at the National Library of Medicine (NLM), with support from the Exhibition Program<\/a>, digitally preserved 55 U-Matic tapes containing HIV\/AIDS titles from the 1980s. This is one of many ongoing efforts at the Library to identify and preserve content documenting HIV\/AIDS including the newly digitized National Commission on AIDS archives<\/a> and the annual December additions to the HIV\/AIDS web archive<\/a>.<\/p>\n

What\u2019s a U-Matic?<\/strong><\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>
A U-matic Cassette Tape<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Sony developed the U-Matic tape format around 1970. Though initially intended for the consumer market\u2014as VHS would be later\u2014the videotapes and players are bulky and were expensive. Sony shifted its marketing to the educational and commercial sectors, where the format was widely used in the 1970s and 1980s. NLM holds thousands of training and informational U-Matics on a variety of topics including child development, mental health, surgical procedures, and Hansen\u2019s disease.<\/p>\n

Memory institutions are under time pressure to reformat these tapes in order to preserve the content and make it available for research. Like other forms of magnetic media, they are not terribly durable. The components of the tape break down, become dirty or sticky, and simply can\u2019t be played back reliably after a few decades. Paper made 500 years ago is much hardier, as is film stock from, say, the 1930s, if kept in the right temperature and humidity conditions. Fifty years from now you\u2019ll still be able to read Johannes de Ketham\u2019s Fasciculus Medicinae <\/em><\/a>printed in 1500, but 1983\u2019s Nursing Care for Patients with AIDS<\/em><\/a> was already deteriorating when our preservation of it began.<\/p>\n

Why Preserve It?<\/strong><\/p>\n

While no one would consult this content to actively treat a patient today, the material on NLM U-Matics is regularly examined by scholars, health care practitioners, documentary film producers, and others seeking to understand medical knowledge and practice from a historical perspective. The AIDS epidemic has taken nearly 40 million lives worldwide and at its apex shook society and medicine to the core. The visual content and first-person viewpoints seen on these aging tapes have much to teach us and are valuable source material for future research.<\/p>\n

Fear, Anxiety, AIDS<\/strong><\/p>\n

\"A<\/a>
Those People : AIDS in the Public Mind<\/em>, ca. 1986
National Library of Medicine #8800548A<\/em><\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Several of the 1980s titles preserved in this batch of U-Matics deal with risk, rumor, and the hazards of a paucity of information about a terrifying illness. In the early days of HIV\/AIDS research and treatment, the disease and its modes of transmission were not well understood. There was plenty of fear among the public as well as concern among health care providers who treated the sick. How risky was it? Could a housekeeper cleaning a hospital room get sick? Should a pregnant woman spend time with her recently-diagnosed brother? In Those People: AIDS in the Public Mind<\/em><\/a> (1986), we hear the answer one woman got. \u201cEvery doctor I talked to said that I shouldn\u2019t have any contact with my brother, because they just don\u2019t know\u2026. I\u2019m pregnant, I can\u2019t take any chances.\u201d The woman and her brother become estranged as a result.<\/p>\n