PARANOIA OVER COVID-19 HITS AFRICA
RELAXING
DAKAR: Landlords evict people from their homes, nurses are abandoned by their husbands and people are spurned just on suspicion of coming into contact with a coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) patient.
Across sub-Saharan Africa, the stigma attached to the coronavirus is so strong that some choose not to seek treatment to avoid facing unbearable hostility.
People suspected of having contracted Covid-19 say they are treated like pariahs: singled out at work, in their neighborhoods and even in their homes.
Fatou, a Senegalese woman in her twenties, who did not use her real name, described her bitter experience about a month ago after coming into contact with a sick person. She was immediately confined to her room and ostracised by people in her community.
“Messages have been circulating on social media with my first name, surname and address,” she said, adding that rumors were spread that she “contracted the virus by sleeping with white people.”
Fatou, who was confined to her room until she tested negative, was then forced to spend two weeks in isolation in a hotel despite having no symptoms because the doctors tracking her case had received “anonymous calls,” she bared.
This at least gave her a respite “from the gossip,” she added.
Some 3,000 kilometers away in Gabon, Jocelyn, a biologist who tests suspect cases in Libreville, said he was subjected to similar discrimination on a daily basis. His team tries to keep a low profile when they visit homes, even if it means endangering their own health.
In Nigeria, public health announcements hammer home the message that stigmatizing survivors of the coronavirus is wrong.
People wear face masks at Ipanema Beach in Rio de Janeiro as Brazil recorded its highest yet daily death toll from the deadly coronavirus.
“We put our suits on inside rather than on the front steps,” he said. “The Gabonese people panic at the idea of us coming to their homes.”
In neighboring Cameroon, a landlord evicted a tenant who tested positive for coronavirus, Yap Boum, an epidemiologist in Yaounde, told Agence France-Presse.
The stigma attached to the virus is not unique to Africa. “But here we tend to be more communal, we know our neighbours,” he said.
Many people prefer to keep to themselves when they develop symptoms. Some had died because they delayed seeking medical treatment for fear of being associated with the virus, according to Boum, who is the director of Doctors Without Borders’ African research center.
“The psychological aspect must be taken into account if we want to win this battle,” he said. Caregivers in particular are often treated like “plague victims.”