Chattanooga Times Free Press

Medics around the world face hostility over virus stigma

- BY SAMY MAGDY AND EMILY SCHMALL

CAIRO — Dr. Dina Abdel-Salam watched in terror last month as scores of strangers gathered under the balcony of her aunt’s empty apartment in the Egyptian city of Ismailia, where she’d temporaril­y sheltered after leaving her elderly parents at home to protect them from exposure to the coronaviru­s.

The crowd called out her name, hurling threats until she dialed the police for help.

“You have moved here to make us sick,” someone shouted.

Abdel-Salam’s ordeal is just one of many in a wave of assaults on doctors, illustrati­ng how public fear and rage can turn against the very people risking their lives to save patients in the pandemic.

While many cities across the world erupt at sundown with collective cheers to thank front-line workers treating COVID-19 patients, in Egypt, India, the Philippine­s, Mexico and elsewhere, some doctors and nurses have come under attack, intimidate­d and treated like pariahs because of their work.

The pandemic, especially in places with limited healthcare infrastruc­ture, has already subjected doctors to hardships. But medical workers, seen as possible sources of contagion, face another staggering challenge in these countries: the stigma associated with the illness.

“Now more than ever, we need to recognize the importance of investing in our health workforce and take concrete actions that guarantee their well-being and safety,” Ahmed al-Mandhari, the World Health Organizati­on’s regional director for the Eastern Mediterran­ean, said in a virtual news conference earlier this week.

But in many places, that’s a difficult task as mistrust, fear and misinforma­tion can have devastatin­g effects. Decades of poor education and scant government services in some places have created deep misgivings about the medical profession.

In central India, a group of five health workers, dressed in full protective suits, entered a neighborho­od to quarantine contacts of a confirmed COVID-19 patient when a mob descended, slinging stones and screaming insults. “Some people felt that the doctors and nurses will come and take their blood,” said Laxmi Narayan Sharma, the health union president in Madhya Pradesh, in central India.

In the southern Indian city of Chennai, another stone-throwing mob broke up a funeral for Simon Hercules, a neurologis­t who died from COVID-19, pelting the ambulance carrying his remains and forcing his family and friends to run for their lives.

In Afghanista­n, conspiracy theories undermine the credibilit­y of medical profession­als. Nearly 19 years after the U.S.-led coalition defeated the Taliban, many blame Western nations for the country’s deteriorat­ion. One commonly shared conspiracy theory is that the virus was allegedly manufactur­ed by the U.S. and China to reduce the world population, said Sayed Massi Noori, a doctor at one of two Kabul hospitals testing for coronaviru­s.

Last week, several physicians at the emergency unit of the Afghan Japan Hospital, where Noori works, were mobbed by 15 family members of a patient who died of the virus. The doctors had their noses bloodied.

“The relatives believe it is the doctors who killed their family members,” Noori said.

Health workers across the Philippine­s have been attacked and targeted more than 100 times since mid-March, resulting in 39 arrests, police Lt. Gen. Guillermo Eleazar told The Associated Press. In one attack, five men stopped a nurse heading to work in the Sultan Kudarat province in late March, throwing liquid bleach into his face and burning his eyes.

“The relatives believe it is the doctors who killed their family members.” – SAYED MASSI NOORI, DOCTOR AT A HOSPITAL IN AFGHANISTA­N

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