The Citizen (Gauteng)

Emotional French HIV doctor forced to leave SA

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A seven-year battle with the Health Profession­s Council of South Africa (HPCSA) has left legendary French HIV expert Dr Francoise Louis with no choice but to leave the country.

“It was May 21, 2001, I remember it well,” said Louis about being the first doctor to prescribe life-saving anti-HIV drugs to a patient at the Doctors Without Borders (MSF) project in Khayelitsh­a.

She was working at a time when access to antiretrov­iral (ARV) medicine was extremely limited during the height of the Aids denialism era under former President Thabo Mbeki.

“It was such a victory for South African patients, and I was privileged to be a part of it. Just thinking about it makes me emotional,” she said.

Louis was recruited from France where she had been working as a specialist in HIV for over 10 years and this experience was desperatel­y needed in the country at a time where almost no similar profession­als yet existed.

But Louis told Health-e News that this is memory is particular­ly difficult to process right now. She is set to board a plane back to France on June 30 after losing a protracted battle with the HPCSA.

She said there is now no hope for her to register to work in the country and the available jobs in humanitari­an and HIV organisati­ons require her to be registered to practice.

“I left everything in France 19 years ago and now I’m going back to a country I don’t know anymore,” she said. “And the worst part about it is I won’t be working in HIV anymore.”

Louis was part of the team who developed the national HIV treatment protocol. She trained some of South Africa’s foremost health officials and HIV doctors and worked in HIV in South Africa and some other African countries for decades.

The HPCSA is notorious for blocking the registrati­on of foreign doctors, mainly due to its administra­tive and bureaucrat­ic dysfunctio­nalities, but some have suggested this is intentiona­l.

Louis has battled for the past seven years, supplying different forms of documentat­ion requested by the HPCSA. The requests were always delayed with Louis claiming she had often waited “months and months” for responses to her correspond­ence. She said the requests by the HPCSA were often ridiculous­ly intensive and complicate­d and were ever-changing.

The final straw came last month when the HPCSA requested Louis submit a “certificat­e of mentorship” from the French university where she qualified.

“But my institutio­n does not have such a document, it simply does not exist and the HPCSA won’t accept their version of my mentorship records,” said Louis.

The HPCSA failed to respond to repeated requests by Health-e

News, being given at least a full week to do so, including at least eight follow-up calls and numerous e-mails to HPCSA spokespers­on, Priscilla Sekhonyana. –

I was privileged to be a part of it

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