Post Tribune (Sunday)

Anger, stigma, shaming hide in pandemic’s midst

- By Christine Armario Associated Press

BOGOTA, Colombia — No one should have known Bella Lamilla’s name.

But within hours of her diagnosis as Ecuador’s coronaviru­s “patient zero,” it was circulatin­g on social media along with photos showing the retired schoolteac­her unconsciou­s and intubated in a hospital bed. Her large, close-knit family watched in horror as a dual tragedy began to u n f o l d : Whi l e Lamilla fought for her life in intensive care, strangers began tearing apart her reputation online.

“Knowing she had it, the old lady didn’t care and went all around,” one person commented on Facebook.

“It was ugly,” said Pedro Valenzuela, 22, Lamilla’s great-nephew. “It hurt a lot.”

The spreading global pandemic has tested the competing interests of public health and privacy, with thousands of individual­s and families experienci­ng both physical illness and the less-discussed stigma that can come with it. While there are many stories about good deeds and people coming together, the coronaviru­s is also bringing out another, darker side of some people: Fear, anger, resentment and shaming.

In India, doctors have reported being evicted by landlords worried they’ll spread coronaviru­s to other tenants.

In the town of St. Michel in Haiti, people stoned an orphanage after a Belgian volunteer was diagnosed.

In Indonesia, an early coronaviru­s patient was subjected to cruel innuendo suggesting she contracted it through sex work.

Ps ychologist­s say it harks back to an age-old instinct to protect oneself and relatives from catching a potentiall­y fatal disease — and a belief, however unfounded, that those who get it bear some responsibi­lity.

“Illness is one of the fundamenta­l fears humans have been dealing with their entire evolution,” said Jeff Sherman, a psychology professor at the University of California, Davis. “It’s not really surprising they would be hostile toward someone they believe is responsibl­e for bringing illness into their community.”

Bella Lamilla followed a daughter to Spain three years ago to enjoy retirement alongside three grandchild­ren in a sleepy Madrid suburb. At least once a year, she flew back to Ecuador, where a flock of relatives would greet her at the airport.

On Feb. 14 she made the 12-hour flight to Ecuador and sailed through immigratio­n, no questions asked, even though she’d started feeling feverish.

Over the next week, relatives took her to two different local doctors, who dismissed her ailments as side effects of a urinary infection or a possible muscular problem, and finally to a private clinic in the city of Guayaquil. Struggling to breathe, Lamilla was put on a ventilator.

After then-Health Minister Catalina Andramuño announced Ecuador’s first case in a live news conference, the rumors and fury almost immediatel­y began swirling on social media.

A medical document with Lamilla’s name surfaced. So did photos and videos showing the petite woman with short blonde hair in a hospital bed. A map with addresses of the family’s homes made the rounds.

“How irresponsi­ble,” one man remarked on pictures of relatives celebratin­g Lamilla’s recent return before her diagnosis.

A few family members defended Lamilla, while others, too distressed by the vitriol, avoided social media entirely. They knew Lamilla would have been mortified to discover she’d potentiall­y spread it to relatives.

“I couldn’t look at anything,” Lamilla’s daughter said. “I didn’t want to hurt my heart.”

Pa t i e n t s

e l s e wh e re whose identities became public have endured similar attacks.

Minutes after Indonesia announced its first two cases, the names of Sita Tyasutami and her mother leaked online with their phone numbers and home address. Hundreds of WhatsApp messages flooded in.

People shared photos of Tyasutami, a 31-year-old profession­al dancer, shimmying in a feathered Brazilian samba bikini, and spread baseless speculatio­n that she contracted the virus after being “rented” by a foreign male client.

“My face is everywhere now, I can’t hide it,” she said.

Studies show that when people link disease to behavior, they are more likely to blame the sick and ostracize them.

A survey in Hong Kong several years after the 2003 SARS outbreak, another coronaviru­s that killed nearly 800, found a small portion of the population still held negative views of those who had contracted it.

“Generally speaking, stigma of infectious diseases can be as devastatin­g to the infected individual­s as the diseases themselves,” the authors wrote.

Lamilla eventually died.

 ?? MARIUXI ORELLANA/AP ?? Relatives of Bella Lamilla, Ecuador’s “patient zero” for the coronaviru­s, maintain quarantine in their home March 26 in Babahoyo, Ecuador. Lamilla was shamed on social media.
MARIUXI ORELLANA/AP Relatives of Bella Lamilla, Ecuador’s “patient zero” for the coronaviru­s, maintain quarantine in their home March 26 in Babahoyo, Ecuador. Lamilla was shamed on social media.
 ??  ?? Lamilla
Lamilla

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