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Spoken Word: Collection Highlights: Justice Edwin Cameron

Justice Edwin Cameron is a South African Supreme Court of Appeal Judge. He is widely noted as one of the first key South African figures to publicly announce that he is living with HIV/AIDS. After contracting the syndrome Justice Cameron has campaigned tirelessly to raise awareness of the various social reverberations that are a direct consequence of the disease. These include drug company pricing, lack of access to medication and governmental denial.

He lived privately with the knowledge of his illness for a significant period of time before allowing this information to become public. He was inspired to act after learning of the death of a young carrier of AIDS named Gugu Dlamini who was stoned and stabbed to death after admitting on a Zulu language radio that she was infected with the disease.
Justice Cameron has employed strong rhetoric throughout his campaign speeches and has compared those governments and officials who do not act on the issue of AIDS with those who did not act when Nazi Germany and Apartheid began to creep into the consciousness of the international community. He has been instrumental in the fight to bring the fight against HIV/AIDS to the forefront of International politics.

The following ‘Spoken Word: Collection Highlight’ is a personal and moving interview with one of modern history’s great campaigners. The radio programme is presented by Fergal Keane who orchestrates an interview that uncovers the motives behind the actions of a dying man.

Photo Courtesy of Ben Oswest

Spoken Word: Collection Highlights: The National Health Service at 60 Years Old

NHS_Scotland

‘The NHS is committed to providing quality care that meets the needs of everyone, is free at the point of need, and is based on a patient’s clinical need, not their ability to pay. The NHS will not exclude people because of their health status or ability to pay.’

On Saturday the 5th of July the National Health Service will celebrate 60 years of providing citizens of the United Kingdom with free healthcare regardless of their wealth or social standing. Born out of the report of the Inter-Departmental Committee on Social Insurance and Allied Services chaired by William Beveridge (better known as the Beveridge Report) the NHS was the key component of the then Labour government’s ambitious plans to create a Welfare State.

Despite various criticisms such as access controls and waiting list times the NHS has survived the first 60 years of its history relatively unscathed.
Currently the NHS faces significant challenges and scrutiny from a wide arc of society. On account of this many changes have been forecast for the NHS. The most extreme viewpoints argue that it is simply not sustainable as a service due to the increasing advancements in drugs and medical procedures. The outlook may not be this bleak but it is certain that the NHS will have to adapt in order to continuing serving the United Kingdom for the next 60 years.
The Spoken Word has a wide array of materials relating to the NHS. Such is the diversity of the collection that the following links will take the user to a selection of Spoken Word materials: