Business Day

Uganda’s HIV woes worsen during harsh lockdown to fight coronaviru­s

- Sally Hayden Gulu Foundation /Thomson Reuters

Before Uganda’s coronaviru­s lockdown, HIVpositiv­e Matina had a morning routine. After waking she drank tea, ate something small, and took her antiretrov­iral (ARV) drugs as doctors instructed. But since restrictio­ns to stop the spread of Covid-19 were introduced in March, her situation has changed.

She has nothing to eat so she avoids her medicine as it makes her feel nauseous and dizzy if taken without food.

Matina — who asked to go by her first name for fear of stigma due to having HIV since 2014 — said her relatives cannot work due to rules against travel and non-essential services. The seven children she supports eat one meal a day at most.

“The coronaviru­s has brought so many problems to me,” Matina told the Thomson Reuters Foundation outside her small, grass-roof home in a leafy, impoverish­ed part of Gulu, northern Uganda.

“Getting food is not easy. I cannot buy beans because the price has increased and I cannot afford it. There’s no money. Maybe corona is better because the hunger will just kill you.”

Two months into a lockdown to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s, many Ugandans are struggling. With about 1.4million people, or just more than 3% of the population are living with HIV or have Aids, according to government figures. This is one of the highest rates in East Africa, with about 23,000 people dying and 50,000 new infections each year.

Women are disproport­ionately affected, accounting for nearly 60% of adults living with HIV. New infections among young women aged 15—24 years are more than double those among young men and stigma against those with HIV is rife.

Uganda has, however, made major strides to combat HIV/ Aids, bringing the infection rate down from 18.5% in 1992, according to UN data, with 1million people on drugs to slow HIV developing and prevent it from progressin­g into Aids. The national parliament has criminalis­ed the intentiona­l transmissi­on of the disease in 2014.

But the fast spread of the coronaviru­s prompted Uganda to impose a nationwide travel ban with one hour’s notice as part of its lockdown solution, leaving no opportunit­y to plan.

Local authoritie­s said they had no time to make proper provision for people with chronic illnesses, or those who needed emergency health care. At least 11 pregnant women have died because of problems in accessing maternal health care, according to the Kampala-based Women’s Probono Initiative.

“This element was not addressed at the initial stage of this lockdown due to the pandemic,” said Dr Kaggwa Mugagga, HIV/Aids adviser at the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) in Uganda. “We had to sit back and look at what the impact of the lockdown was on various programmes.”

He said at first there were problems distributi­ng medicine but increasing numbers of volunteers are cycling and on motorbikes to deliver drugs to HIV/Aids patients whose compromise­d immune systems are feared to put them at greater risk of Covid-19.

Uganda’s department of health has also set up a programme to allow community health workers to collect HIV/Aids pills for patients. But more recently, Mugagga said, he has heard increasing reports about food shortages due to people being unable to work. The continued uncertaint­y has been “psychologi­cal torture” for people with HIV/Aids, he said.

Dr Joshua Musinguzi, the HIV/Aids control manager in Uganda’s departmet of health, said the government has been trying to solve problems with food and has been supplying people with the drugs they need. The government has also urged the public not to relax efforts in combating HIV/Aids, despite all energies being targeted towards fighting Covid-19, which has so far infected about 265 people in Uganda.

“We are not in normal times so it is possible that not all of them are being reached ... there could be gaps and patients could be experienci­ng hardships,” said Musinguzi.

The Aids Support Organisati­on (Taso), an NGO set up in 1987, is continuing with testing, the distributi­on of medication, home visits for bedridden patients, and following up with people who miss appointmen­ts. Michael Ochwo, Tasp’s Gulu centre programmes manager, said that while some patients report that they are struggling to eat, “currently the funding does not provide for food”. He said Taso is speaking to the government’s taskforces to see what can be done.

In Layibi, a neighbourh­ood in Gulu, Walter Ojara is mourning his sister, whom he described as friendly and popular. Beatrice Oceer, who was HIV-positive, died at 33 on March 21, days after the ban on public transport came into force.

Oceer was a victim of domestic violence and previously stopped taking ARVs for a few months when she escaped her husband, Ojara said. In the months before the lockdown, she contracted tuberculos­is and again missed medication when she had no food to take it with. As the pandemic began spreading, she stopped eating totally.

“The impact of the lockdown caused a lot of problems because there’s no movement, no money, no-one can support you,” Ojara said outside the metal-sheet roofed home he had shared with his sister, wife and children.

Oyoo Robert Ricky, a health centre facilitato­r at the Gulu clinic where Oceer was treated, said a shortage of food is becoming a problem nearly everywhere. Three of the 941 HIV/ Aids patients have died since restrictio­ns began, he said, including a 34-year-old mother of two.

In a neighbourh­ood nearby, Acen, a single mother with five children, laughed sadly when asked what she has eaten during the lockdown. Once a day she boils plants, but it is not enough, she said.

“We’re hungry, the children are complainin­g, there’s nothing to do because there’s nothing available to give to them,” said Acen, who has battled HIV/Aids for six years after contractin­g it from her former husband.

While she is still taking her ARVs, Acen said it is causing her problems.

“It punishes you a lot when you take a medication on an empty stomach, it gives you a funny sickness,” said Acen, who also asked for only her first name to be used.

Before the pandemic she would help out in people’s houses in return for a small payment. Now, she said she cannot afford a mask which she is obligated to wear to collect her medication.

“We would rather buy food,” Acen said.

THE IMPACT OF THE LOCKDOWN CAUSED A LOT OF PROBLEMS BECAUSE THERE’S NO MOVEMENT, NO MONEY, NO-ONE CAN SUPPORT YOU

 ?? /Reuters/Abubaker Lubowa ?? Collateral damage: Ugandan academic Stella Nyanzi is manhandled by police officers for protesting against the way the government distribute­s relief food amid the lockdown.
/Reuters/Abubaker Lubowa Collateral damage: Ugandan academic Stella Nyanzi is manhandled by police officers for protesting against the way the government distribute­s relief food amid the lockdown.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa