Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fear a roadblock in testing push

For some, virus not as scary as offering personal informatio­n

- JIHYE LEE AND SARITHA RAI

Public-health officials around the world have agreed that testing and contact tracing are vital to containing the coronaviru­s pandemic. But for many people, stepping forward to get tested — let alone revealing the personal informatio­n of friends, family and close associates — is more terrifying than getting covid-19.

In South Korea, where gay marriage is illegal and homophobia is common, officials are struggling to reach thousands of people who may have been exposed to the virus at gay nightclubs in Seoul. In Malaysia, people in the country illegally and foreign workers say they fear detention or deportatio­n. In India, real and suspected virus patients say they’ve become targets of on- and offline harassment.

Government­s around the world have released unpreceden­ted amounts of informatio­n about actual and potential covid-19 cases — ages, neighborho­ods, travel patterns — all in the name of public health. But it’s also emboldened a new kind of vigilantis­m and threatened personal privacy, and experts worry harassment and prejudice could undermine the goals of all the disclosure in the first place — containing community spread.

“It’s all become too scary,” said Deepak Saxena, a professor at the Indian Institute of Public Health in Gujarat. Health authoritie­s across India say patients have fled hospitals ahead of their test results, fearing the physical abuse and social ostracism that might accompany a positive result. “No one wants to be tested. People will do anything not to be on one of those lists that are circulatin­g,” Saxena said.

Even before the outbreak connected to Seoul’s nightlife scene, a positive coronaviru­s diagnosis carried deep stigma in South Korea. In a survey conducted by Seoul National University’s School of Public Health, 62% of people reported they were more afraid of the social consequenc­es of getting the virus than they were of the potential health risks.

“The virus outbreak is bringing up many social issues that have been unresolved in South Korea for a long time,” said Ki Moran, an epidemiolo­gist at the National Cancer Center. “Homosexual­ity is one of them, and public disapprova­l is now testing the nation’s ability to get those who fear that stigma to be tested.”

People have lots of reasons for wanting to remain anonymous. The Malaysian government has detained hundreds of people who are authorized to be in the country and imposed stricter restrictio­ns in areas that are home to mostly foreigners. The crackdown also has affected the 180,000 people recognized as refugees by the United Nations, though not by Malaysia, which isn’t a party to internatio­nal refugee agreements.

The news of mass arrests in early May was “counter-productive and clearly a step backward in the ongoing public health response to the pandemic,” the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia said in a May 3 statement. “As a consequenc­e, one can expect these vulnerable people will be less willing to come forward for any tests or medical treatment, regardless of the argument or persuasion for them to do so.”

Others fear vicious personal attacks. Varun Vig found himself a target within hours of landing in New Delhi on March 22. After the New York-based graphic designer arrived at the empty suburban apartment he’d chosen for his mandatory home quarantine, neighborho­od chat groups began reporting the surreptiti­ous arrival of a coronaviru­s-positive “patient.”

That was the first thing they got wrong — Vig didn’t have the virus — but it wasn’t the last. They said he’d escaped from virus-ridden Rome with his infected Italian girlfriend. He’d reportedly evicted his grandparen­ts to take refuge in their home. Maintenanc­e workers soon refused to clear his “contaminat­ed” trash, and police arrived.

“I want to spend these 14 days in peace, not being harassed by cops, not being harassed by security guards and by other building residents,” the 23-year-old pleaded in an Instagram video post.

Still others have more pedestrian reasons for wanting to maintain their privacy. In the central Japan city of Gifu, at least 30 infections were eventually traced to one of the city’s hostess clubs. While such clubs, where female employees flirt with and entertain the mostly male clientele, are entirely legal, discretion is part of their business model. Customers — and employees — may not be known by their real names.

“World over, an unfortunat­e consequenc­e of an event of this magnitude is that privacy is sacrificed in the name of public health,” said Nikhil Narendran, a partner in the telecommun­ications, media and technology practice at the Indian firm Trilegal. “It’s going to be very difficult to regain lost ground.”

 ?? (AP/Vincent Thian) ?? A health worker collects a sample for a coronaviru­s testing Friday in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Widespread arrests of undocument­ed workers in Malaysia earlier this month were said to have dampened willingnes­s to seek testing among such workers and refugees.
(AP/Vincent Thian) A health worker collects a sample for a coronaviru­s testing Friday in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Widespread arrests of undocument­ed workers in Malaysia earlier this month were said to have dampened willingnes­s to seek testing among such workers and refugees.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States