It's a Sin: David Furnish praises man for revealing HIV status after being inspired by show
- Published
A man who kept his HIV diagnosis a secret for 10 years has been praised for opening up about it after after watching It's a Sin.
The Channel 4 series follows a group of friends who move to London in 1981 and have their lives turned upside down by the outbreak of the Aids crisis.
Luke Kelly, 30, saw it and was inspired to reveal his HIV status on Instagram.
David Furnish, chair of the Elton John Aids Foundation, described him as "a hero" on BBC News on Monday.
Mr Kelly, whose original Instagram live video in conversation with his friend has been watched more than 47,000 times since it was posted on 20 February, was first diagnosed in 2011 when he was 21.
He told the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire on Monday he thought he was going to die when he first found out, and how he had felt great shame about contracting what is now considered to be a "very manageable" virus.
"I actually thought about, 'How can my parents see me die?'" said Mr Kelly. "And this is quite a traumatic experience to have to go through when you're 21, and that could have been avoided had there been a bit more education."
'So much shame'
Watching It's A Sin, which stars Olly Alexander and Lydia West, brought those emotions back into sharp focus but in a fresh context, he said.
"There was so much that came up for me that I resonated with, and I kind of thought I was fine with my my status, because it has been 10 years," Mr Kelly added. "But I realised it's something that I was hiding - it was a secret.
"There's so much shame associated with HIV, and there's so much negativity and it kind of stems from the fear that was set up in in the 80s, because there was no medication available," he continued.
"The government had to put this fear out there to the public - it's a little bit like what we see with coronavirus, people feel scared. And I understand why it happened, [but] the government and the media never really did a follow-up story so people aren't aware of what it is like to live with HIV today - it's completely different now."
Despite the advancements in medical science, he said, some attitudes around the virus - and towards gay people generally - remain stuck in the past.
"I couldn't even tell my parents back then because it was just something that I was so ashamed of, [there was] so much stigma attached to it.
"The shame comes out of the homophobia really, so that still exists today."
'Put an end to HIV'
While he was speaking to the BBC News Channel, David Furnish, who is married to Sir Elton John, surprised Mr Kelly with a message of support and thanks for helping to fight the stigma around the virus.
"Luke, I take my hat off to you - you're a hero," said Furnish.
"The Instagram chat that you put up with your friends serves as such an inspiration to so many people.
"You are the most robust, happy, living example of what it's like to live with HIV nowadays. And you're so incredibly well informed about how the virus is transmitted and prevented and how well the drugs work."
He added: "If more people did what you did... we could put an end to HIV."
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