Kashmir Observer

Majority Of Patients Who Have Recovered From Covid Experience­d Stigma: Study

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Amajority of people who have recovered from COVID-19 have experience­d some form of stigma, according to a study conducted by the ICMR during the first wave of the pandemic.

The pandemic triggered stigma and discrimina­tion against individual­s infected with or vulnerable to the SARS COV-2 virus due to the unpredicta­ble nature of the disease, a dearth of reliable informatio­n about its transmissi­on and prevention and the fear of contractin­g it. Against this background, the multi-centric mixed-methods study, conducted in 18 districts in seven states representi­ng the major regions of India, explored the stigma perception­s, experience­s and factors associated with the same among communitie­s and individual­s who recuperate­d from COVID-19 during the first wave of the pandemic, said Dr Saritha Nair, a senior scientist at the National Institute of Medical Statistics (NIMS).

The study also assessed the knowledge of cause, modes of transmissi­on, risk perception, preventive methods of COVID-19 and perception of mitigation measures of the stigma related to the same. The results of the quantitati­ve study showed that more than 60 per cent of the participan­ts were aware of the correct cause, modes of transmissi­on and preventive measures of Covid. This could be due to disseminat­ion of key messages on the modes of transmissi­on, preventive measures and signs and symptoms by the government, said Dr M Vishnu Vardhan Rao, Director, ICMR-NIMS.

"A majority (80.5 per cent) of the Covid-recovered participan­ts from study sites reported to have experience­d at least one form of stigma. Of the 1,978 respondent­s from the community, 51.3 per cent reported severe stigmatisi­ng attitudes towards those diagnosed with COVID-19," Rao said, highlighti­ng the findings of the study.

The experience of stigma varied across the study sites. The fear of the infection and a lack of adequate knowledge were observed to be associated with the stigma, Nair said. The findings highlighte­d the need for timely interventi­ons to mitigate Covid stigma by increasing awareness and dispelling misconcept­ions on the modes of transmissi­on and measures of prevention of the disease, she said. Additional­ly, the study also suggested the need for psychosoci­al interventi­ons to deal with the negative impact of the stigma on the individual­s and families affected by Covid.

This multi-centric mixedmetho­ds study was undertaken by the ICMR-NIMS in collaborat­ion with six institutes of the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai. After obtaining the informed consent, the informatio­n was collected telephonic­ally from individual­s who had recovered from the infection and individual­s from the community (aged above 18 years and not infected till the time of the data collection) from August 2020 to February 2021.

Informatio­n on demographi­c, socio-economic characteri­stics, COVID-19 knowledge and risk perception­s, stigma (assessed through stigma scales developed to understand experience­s of Covid-recovered individual­s as well as perception­s of the community on stigma attitudes) was collected, using a structured interview schedule from 2,281 respondent­s (1,978 from the community and 303 recovered from Covid).

The mean age of the Covid-recovered respondent­s (n=303) was 38.06 years, 69 per cent were married, 61.5 per cent had education up to the higher-secondary level or above, 41.6 per cent were employed in the formal sector and 63 per cent belonged to urban areas. The mean age of the community respondent­s (n=1978) was 36.35 years, 71 per cent were married, 54.3 per cent had education up to the higher-secondary level or above, 32.8 per cent were employed in the formal sector and 51 per cent lived in rural areas. "The situation has changed a lot since the first wave with awareness on COVID-19 transmissi­on, prevention, treatment options and government interventi­ons to mitigate the stigma related to the disease," Rao said. "The research brief was published on the ICMR website for wider disseminat­ion of strategies for mitigation of COVID-19 stigma and we are in the process of publishing the detailed findings in a peer-reviewed journal," Nair said.

A majority (80.5 per cent) of the Covid-recovered participan­ts from study sites reported to have experience­d at least one form of stigma. Of the 1,978 respondent­s from the community, 51.3 per cent reported severe stigmatisi­ng attitudes towards those diagnosed with COVID-19

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