The Star Malaysia

’We have been forgotten’

From being in the spotlight, Brazil’s Zika generation is now left neglected

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RIO DE JANEIRO: When doctors told her that the six-month-old foetus she was carrying had severe brain damage caused by the Zika virus, Thamires Ferreira da Silva tried to commit suicide by jumping in front of a bus in Rio de Janeiro.

“I just wanted to finish it,” said the 29-year-old Brazilian, crying.

But the bus driver braked in time and more than two years later, she is raising her son Miguel with the help of her husband Wallace, their families and medical specialist­s.

Miguel was the first child in Brazil to be diagnosed with the mosquito-borne illness, which at the time was an unremarked phenomenon but which soon grew to be the focus of a global health alert.

“I feel that we’ve been totally forgotten,” Ferreira da Silva said.

Her son, aged two years and four months, suffers from microcepha­ly – a condition in which the brain does not develop properly and results in a smaller than normal head.

He also has lissenceph­aly, where parts of the brain appear smooth, the rare Dandy-Walker syndrome that is characteri­sed by deformatio­n of the part of the brain that controls movement, kidney problems and epilepsy.

Despite being cross-eyed, the toddler can see, and he reacts to family voices. But he is unable to walk, sit or lift his head.

His parents follow a strict and costly regime that involves giving him six medicines every 12 hours and regular hospitaliz­ations.

“It’s difficult and it costs a lot. Families hide their child so society doesn’t see it. But us, we want to be part of society,” Wallace said.

He works at night as a computer technician to help pay the countless bills racked up for Miguel’s care, including for his paediatric­ian, kidney doctor, physiother­apist and psychomoto­r specialist, spread across three different hospitals.

The Zika epidemic in Brazil that started in 2015 caused an exponen- tial increase in the number of babies with microcepha­ly and other neurologic­al defects, particular­ly in the northeast, the country’s poorest region.

Between November 2015 and May 2018, the health ministry registered more than 3,000 cases linked to Zika infections during pregnancy.

The government has taken several measures to assist mothers raising Zika-affected children, such as priority access to public housing and minimum-wage payments for the poorest families.

But often they still face difficulti­es getting access to municipal services because of a lack of informatio­n or the complicate­d bureaucrac­y.

“They do everything so you don’t come back. There is a lot of bureaucrac­y so you just give up because you are overwhelme­d with so many things,” Ferreira da Silva said.

Initially, she and her husband contacted other families in the same situation to swap informatio­n and lobby authoritie­s to make sure their rights were respected, such as the house they have just moved into in Rio.

But their standard of living and the attention they have managed to provide for Miguel is not the rule, they say – and especially not for single mothers who have been abandoned by their partners.

“Miguel makes us fight, not only for him but also for the families. Because we know how difficult it is. We know that many families have an absent father,” said Wallace. — AFP

 ??  ?? Bonding time: Thamires playing with Miguel at their apartment in Belford Roxo, Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil. — AFP
Bonding time: Thamires playing with Miguel at their apartment in Belford Roxo, Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil. — AFP
 ??  ?? Tragic case: Miguel was the first child in Brazil to be diagnosed with the mosquitobo­rne illness. — AFP
Tragic case: Miguel was the first child in Brazil to be diagnosed with the mosquitobo­rne illness. — AFP

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