Arab Times

China, WHO in talks to trace virus origin

Stigma stifles response

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BEIJING, Aug 5, (AP): China and the World Health Organizati­on are discussing plans to trace the origin of the coronaviru­s outbreak following a visit to the country by two experts from the UN agency, the foreign ministry said Tuesday.

Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin told reporters the experts conducted “preparator­y consultati­ons on scientific research cooperatio­n on virus tracing” during their two-week stay, which ended Sunday.

Their talks touched on research in the areas of population, environmen­t, molecules, animal traceabili­ty and transmissi­on routes of the coronaviru­s, as well as plans for further scientific research, Wang said.

The two sides also further investigat­ed the possible animal source, intermedia­te host and transmissi­on route of the coronaviru­s to “more effectivel­y prevent and control the epidemic,” Wang said.

Wang said the two sides worked on formulatin­g a plan for China’s contributi­on to the global tracing effort under a resolution passed by the World Health Assembly under WHO which is headed by Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s. No word was given on when that effort will begin in earnest.

The virus was first detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year and has been linked to a wholesale food market where wild animals were sold. Scientists think it likely jumped from a wild animal such as a bat to humans via an intermedia­ry species, possibly the anteater-like pangolin.

However, China says a full investigat­ion may have to wait until the pandemic is under control and has rejected accusation­s that it delayed releasing informatio­n to WHO at the start of the outbreak.

After 23 days in quarantine in Uganda – far longer than required – Jimmy Spire Ssentongo walked free in part because of a cartoon he drew. It showed a bound prisoner begging for liberation after multiple negative tests, while a health minister demanded to know where he was hiding the virus.

“The impression was that we were a dangerous group and that what was necessary was to protect the rest of society from us,” said Ssentongo, a cartoonist for Uganda’s Observer newspaper who was put in quarantine when he returned from Britain in March.

Informatio­n

The fear he describes is indicative of the dangerous stigma that has sprung up around the coronaviru­s in Africa — fueled, in part, by severe and sometimes arbitrary quarantine rules as well as insufficie­nt informatio­n about the virus.

Such stigma is not unique to the continent: Patients from Ecuador to Indonesia have been shamed when their diagnosis became known.

But with testing in Africa limited by supply shortages and some health workers going without proper protective gear, fear of the virus on the continent as it approaches 1 million confirmed infections is hindering the ability to control it in many places — and also discouragi­ng people from seeking care for other diseases.

The way people were treated early in this pandemic is “just like the way, early on in the HIV epidemic, patients were being treated,” Salim Abdool Karim, an epidemiolo­gist who chairs South Africa’s COVID-19 ministeria­l advisory committee, told a World Health Organizati­on event last month. People with HIV were often shunned by their own families, and reports of health workers refusing to care for them were common in the 1990s.

Now, some people avoid testing for the coronaviru­s “because if they test, they’re ostracized,” Karim said.

Or simply locked away. Ssentongo, who was released from quarantine on the 24th day after testing negative three times, told The Associated Press that he and others were poorly treated at the facility, a hotel. Like him, many were held for far longer than the required 14 days, and he saw some bribe their way out. He was among those that went on hunger strikes in a bid to be freed.

“It was dehumanizi­ng,” said Ssentongo, who also noted that there was no social distancing at the facility, and medical workers were rarely seen and inconsiste­nt in their efforts to control the virus. A medical team once took a woman suspected of having the virus from her room and sprayed her with disinfecta­nt, but ignored her partner.

In neighborin­g Kenya, people in quarantine reported similar poor treatment and discrimina­tion.

At one facility, those inside said their money was rejected by the staff and the surroundin­g community when they tried to buy food, according to a Human Rights Watch report in May. At another, kitchen staff sometimes declined to serve them, forcing a security guard to bring the food.

Some humanitari­an groups warn that stigma could set back Africa’s pandemic response.

Community

In Somalia, “our teams are seeing people who have tested positive running away from their homes out of fear of being stigmatize­d by the community,” Abdinur Elmi, an official with the aid group CARE, said in a statement.

As a result, the group said, contact tracing has become nearly impossible in the Horn of Africa country, which has one of the world’s weakest health systems after nearly three decades of conflict.

Worryingly, the stigma has attached to health and aid workers in some places.

In the West African nation of Burkina Faso, a nurse’s assistant who found employment as a cleaner in a hospital said her uncle gave her an ultimatum: quit or leave home.

“He said, ‘Pack your bags and find another place to live,’” said the woman, who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to avoid retributio­n from her family.

Health Minister Pierre Somse, of Central African Republic, said humanitari­an workers have been targeted because the idea has spread that Westerners, who often do such work, brought the virus. He urged government­s to “de-dramatize” the response to calm panicked communitie­s.

Aid workers have raised similar concerns about how the response is described in Uganda, where health officials frequently speak of “hunting down” suspected patients.

The blaring horns and sirens of the vehicles used by those tracing the contacts of the infected add to a sense of fear in some communitie­s, such as the village of Bugomoro near the Congo border, said Charles Kaboggoza. The World Vision official said he witnessed discrimina­tion against the family of a man who tested positive after returning from Afghanista­n in March.

“The people had stopped them from going to fetch water from the (well),” he said. “It was really stigmatizi­ng.”

Some accused the patient of bringing a “curse” to the community, he said.

Stigma is also having a negative effect on health care more broadly. In CARE-supported health centers in Somalia, the number of people seeking consultati­ons for communicab­le diseases has fallen by 26% since the first case of COVID-19 was recorded in the country, “with fear of stigma for having the virus being a major factor,” according to the group.

Some leaders are aware of the dangers of stigma and are countering it.

In South Africa, which has more than half the confirmed virus cases on the continent, President Cyril Ramaphosa praised the family of diplomat Zindzi Mandela, daughter of anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela, for publicly saying that she had tested positive before she died.

On Twitter, Ramaphosa’s health minister, Zweli Mkhize, encouraged South Africans to be tolerant as “it can happen to anybody in any house.”

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Dr Tedros

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