When AIDS Activism Went Inside a Hospital: Ward 5B at San Francisco General 

Documentary recounts San Francisco’s Ward 5B, where nurses and activists humanized AIDS care amid fear.
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The Call 

Out of the gay rights activism in the 1970s came AIDS activism in the early 1980s. By then, the incidence and severity of AIDS had become evident and caused enough fear to generate social backlash against those with the disease. This, along with federal government insouciance at the time, made it necessary for gay rights activists to extend their remit into advocacy for health care specialization and research advancements for AIDS. The expanded activism was visible on the streets and at governmental research institutions (e.g., National Institutes of Health). Where it was also taking place, and not in such an obvious way, was within certain hospitals.  

San Francisco General Hospital answered the call first in 1983 when it created a special unit for the care of people with AIDS in “Ward 5B.” The unit was in operation through its move in 1986 into Ward 5A to accommodate more patients, and until 2003 when advances in antiretroviral treatment of AIDS made the unit no longer necessary. But throughout, the struggle to maintain and advance the unit medically, socially, and politically persisted. The documentary film, aptly named “5B,” covers the struggles, successes, and failures of the unit, and the activism required of the staff and advocates for its creation and ongoing viability.  

From the Inside 

The story is told from various perspectives through interviews with key figures in the unit’s development and operation, and with archival footage of the unit and AIDS activism in the community. The most prominent among the key figures is Cliff Morrison, a clinical nurse specialist who spearheaded the idea for the unit and then managed it. Several other nurses who served in staff and supervisory positions are also featured. Participating physicians include Paul Volberding, an oncologist at the time who became pivotal in the development of effective HIV treatments, and Julie Gerberding, a physician treating patients on the unit who later became the Director of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). Lorraine Day, the chief of orthopedic surgery at the hospital when the unit opened, is heard often as an opposing voice. Hank Plante, a local television news reporter, also appears frequently to offer his perspectives on many of the social and political issues swirling around the unit. Among other participants are AIDS activists, volunteers, and family members of unit patients. 

Several storylines frame the documentary including how nurses drove the unit’s inception and then were instrumental in running it. “Nurses were in charge,” said Volberding, admiringly. Interwoven throughout the film are the experiences of the patients and individual nurses, including one nurse who was infected with HIV from a needle stick. “Those nurses were the real heroes,” said one activist.    

Rare is the story, though, about heroes who aren’t confronted with daunting challenges, and thus this documentary includes a storyline involving attacks the unit nurses encountered from inside the hospital. The nurses of this unit practiced in ways they considered safe but not in such a manner that would preclude them from touching patients or require them to don so much protective gear they become unseeable. Nurses and clinicians from other units objected and did not want to be compelled to adopt practices they thought endangered them on the occasions they took care of AIDS patients. The film follows this story through union grievances and public debates to their conclusion, which sided with the unit nurses and their advocates. The spirit of activism among the unit staff was pivotal in fending off the many challenges they faced. 

Keeping in Touch 

The documentary reveals stark juxtapositions that can manifest in the midst of an infectious epidemic, and in particular when an epidemic selects an identifiable group that is unwelcome in mainstream society. Two juxtapositions that stand out are the emotion of love with that of fear, and those who are deemed worthy with those who are considered disreputable. 

No treatments for the HIV infection or for the many horrid and lethal diseases resulting from AIDS were available when the unit opened—it was“a very, very unpleasant death” as one nurse put it. The nurses saw a big part of their role as offering love: “Here you were allowed to love your patients.” They offered it through human touch. Morrison’s view was, “If we can’t save these folks, we’re going to touch them.” To touch the patients in this way required that they balance it with the risk of exposure to infection and still comply with universal precautions. Nevertheless, fear was prevalent—some people were “truly hysterical” according to Gerberding—and it touched off conflict among the health care staff. “People were afraid…we found ourselves attacking each other…everyone was so stressed,” is how Volberding described the situation. This balance is one that is continuously negotiated in health care settings, but it was more pronounced during the early years of the AIDS epidemic, and at San Francisco General, it had to be mediated by hospital and union officials. 

At the time unit opened, and for a long while after, people with AIDS were scorned. The gay lifestyle was linked to the disease and so a view held by many was that the gay community deserved to be struck down by this plague. They were not worthy of all the human resources, technology, and money the disease required. The documentary brings this sentiment to life by showing the actions some people took to prevent getting these patients help, and the actions governments didn’t take to help them. Also shown, however, was how the activism of health care professionals and others in Ward 5B helped to overcome these obstacles. Without it in the case of the unit in Ward 5B, the activism in the streets outside the hospital alone may not have been enough.  

But Then 

These fevers abated some when medical advances produced treatments that obviated the need for AIDS units, and changes in societal attitudes led to more acceptance of gay lifestyles. The next epidemic that targeted marginalized and susceptible groups would determine whether lessons learned from the time of this unit had been incorporated in response protocols. That opportunity came the year this documentary was released in 2019 when Covid struck elderly people first and hardest, and especially those in communal living arrangements.  

Note: 

The documentary was featured on the podcast episode, How Terrible It Was: Three Takes on the AIDS Crisis with Dr. Ross Slotten, which can be accessed here on medhum. In addition to the documentary, the podcast episode included the novel, The Great Believers, and the memoir, The Plague Years: A Doctor’s Journey through the AIDS Crisis were discussed. The author of the memoir, Dr. Ross Slotten, joined the podcast as a guest. 

Title image credit: 
James Steakley, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons 

Documentary information: 
Film title: 5B
Directors: Paul Haggis, Dan Krauss 
Studio: Vertical Entertainment 
Viewing source: Amazon Prime 
U.S. release date: June, 2019 
Run time: 134 minutes  

Trailers from 5B Film

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