Sunday Times

Community hostility adds to corona distress

Health experts denounce growing Covid-19 stigma

- By SIPOKAZI FOKAZI and PHILANI NOMBEMBE

The stigma that attached itself to HIV/Aids patients is back, but this time the targets are people with Covid-19.

Families in the Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal told the Sunday Times this week that they had faced hostility after their relatives tested positive for the coronaviru­s that causes the disease.

In Khayelitsh­a, rumours spread that a 25-year-old mother who was the first confirmed person with the virus in Cape Town’s largest township had been paid “to spread the virus”.

Infectious disease experts said stigmatisi­ng the coronaviru­s and Covid19 could fuel its spread because people would try to conceal their condition.

“Stigma drives people undergroun­d, affects their mental wellbeing and makes our efforts to reach, test and treat everyone so much harder,” said LindaGail Bekker, head of the Desmond Tutu HIV Centre at the University of Cape Town.

● In the battle to defeat Covid-19, a young Khayelitsh­a mother and her family have an unwelcome secondary fight on their hands — against the stigma growing around people infected with the virus.

After the 25-year-old tested positive eight days ago, becoming the first coronaviru­s victim in Cape Town’s largest township, her landlady asked her to leave. Then a flood of hateful social media posts and voice notes began circulatin­g.

The mother of one had been treated like “someone with leprosy”, said a family spokespers­on. “After she informed the landlady about the outcome of her test, a department of health vehicle came to pick them up on Sunday. Neighbours stood outside watching. It was a spectacle. The landlady showed uneasiness. She wanted her out of her premises.”

Rumours that the young mother had been paid “to spread the virus” proliferat­ed after she and her child were taken into isolation.

“It is worse than the stigma that was attached to HIV/Aids,” said the family spokespers­on. “I am praying for her safety as there is so much anger out there.”

Infectious disease experts called for calm and compassion this week, arguing that stigmatisi­ng Covid-19 could fuel the spread of the virus because victims would do their best to conceal their condition.

Linda-Gail Bekker, head of the Desmond Tutu HIV Centre at the University of Cape Town, warned that excluding people based on their illness could harm treatment programmes, as it did with HIV/Aids.

“Stigma drives people undergroun­d, affects their mental wellbeing and makes our efforts to reach, test and treat everyone so much harder,” said Bekker. “This is an airborne disease like colds and flu. We don’t blame people who have these diseases, we normally feel sorry for them.”

Treatment Action Campaign chair Sibongile Tshabalala said there was an impression that Covid-19 only affects people who have travelled outside the country. “I see the ignorance every day in the township,” she said.

Conspiracy theories that Covid-19 was created in China “because China wants to take over the world economy” were not helping. “There were similar stories about HIV. We need to put in the same energy that we put into HIV. It won’t be a one-day thing, but we need to continuous­ly talk about it.”

Vuyiseka Dubula-Majola, director of the Africa Centre for HIV/Aids Management at Stellenbos­ch University, said SA “cannot afford another wave of stigma”.

She added: “One of the biggest reasons people stop or refuse to take antiretrov­iral treatment is stigma. Sadly, Covid-19 will most likely affect more people who have TB and HIV, including those who are not on treatment or do not know their status.

“Covid-19 stigma will result in setbacks in the work that we have done to combat HIV/TB stigma.”

Leigh-Ann Snyman, patient-support manager with Doctors Without Borders, called for compassion instead of shaming for those infected with Covid-19.

“There certainly is a risk of people infected with Covid-19 being stigmatise­d, not only in their communitie­s but in health-care facilities. Stigma is often found where fear exists. Stigma also thrives where misinforma­tion runs unchecked.”

She said overwhelmi­ng informatio­n flows via social media and word of mouth, compounded by high volumes of fake news and inaccuraci­es, could add to this tense mood.

“It is crucial that the blaming of patients who bear no fault at all be clearly and strongly denounced, and that a culture of compassion is encouraged instead.”

While HIV stigma was driven mainly by the slow government response in SA, Snyman said the response to Covid-19 had been extraordin­arily swift. “We hope that this will help massively to mitigate Covid-19 stigma.”

It’s a painful issue for a KwaZulu-Natal woman who buried her sister, a teacher from Isipingo, at a family homestead on Friday.

Despite five relatives testing negative for Covid-19, they were being shunned, said the woman. “Where we stay, even where we work, people are scared because it is a new virus and people don’t understand it, people are afraid of us.

“Because of the way people reacted to this we feel that we have been isolated even by our community.” — Additional reporting by Zimasa Matiwane

 ??  ?? Linda-Gail Bekker
Linda-Gail Bekker
 ?? Picture: Esa Alexander ?? The first resident of Khayelitsh­a township to test positive had to leave her home due to community hostility.
Picture: Esa Alexander The first resident of Khayelitsh­a township to test positive had to leave her home due to community hostility.

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