A health worker conducts an HIV/Aids test on a
child. File photo
THURSDAY
AUGUST 10 2017
In Summary
·
Stigma. Many people living with the virus fear to
disclose their status due to fear of discrimination.
By FELIX BASIIME
Kasese. Sarah
(not real names), 13, stays with her mother, Margaret Birungi at Nyakasanga
West in Kasese Municipality, Kasese District. Both daughter and mother are
living with HIV/Aids. Sarah’s father died five years ago.
As a single mother of five, Birungi could not afford staying in town with the
family and decided to send Sarah and her siblings to her grandparents in
Kibiito, Kabarole District in 2015.
In Kibiito, Sarah joined Mugoma B Primary School, where she dropped out in
Primary Three due to stigmatisation.
“She had to leave school due to stigmatisation from her peers and teachers.
Pupils would laugh at her for taking ARVs, while teachers would beat her for
not performing well in class as she would most of the time miss classes due to
sickness,” her mother recollects. She adds that her family was forced to
relocate to their current residence in Kasese, where she believed the
stigmatisation would be less and also live in better social and economic
conditions.
Birungi says even when she [Sarah] fetched water at the borehole in the
village, other people would not use it, claiming they would contract the
disease.
“I asked myself why I was the only one taking drugs daily and my other siblings
didn’t,” Sarah narrated her ordeal to Daily Monitor in an interview recently.
Though the family relocated to Kasese Town, Sarah hasn’t resumed school as she
and her mother spend most of the time attending clinics at St Paul’s Health
Centre IV.
Birungi says: “Yes, we are now in town, there is less stigmatisation, and better feeding but I cannot afford school fees for Sarah.”
Birungi says: “Yes, we are now in town, there is less stigmatisation, and better feeding but I cannot afford school fees for Sarah.”
However, despite the interventions by government and other stakeholders,
including NGOs, stigmatisation is still a big hurdle in the fight against
HIV/Aids.
According to Faith Makombi Kwebaze, the programmes coordinator at National Community of Women Living with HIV/Aids (Nacwola), an NGO based in Kasese, out of 6,800 children in their area of coverage, only 3,500 can disclose their sero status.
According to Faith Makombi Kwebaze, the programmes coordinator at National Community of Women Living with HIV/Aids (Nacwola), an NGO based in Kasese, out of 6,800 children in their area of coverage, only 3,500 can disclose their sero status.
Nacwola covers Kasese, Rubirizi, Kiruhura and Sheema districts.
“Stigmatisation and discrimination is still there, especially among the married couples. This is because most men have limited information about HIV/Aids prevention,” Makombi explains.
“Stigmatisation and discrimination is still there, especially among the married couples. This is because most men have limited information about HIV/Aids prevention,” Makombi explains.
“Women test for HIV/Aids but when they go back home and disclose their positive
status to their husbands and other family members, they are discriminated
against and the family breaks up,” Makombi adds.
Nachwola community volunteers (individuals living with HIV/Aids) have come up
to offer free counselling services to people living with HIV/Aids as one of the
ways to fight stigmatisation.
“We have community volunteers and in schools, our monitors go there to teach
life skills to pupils,” she adds.
At St Paul’s Health Centre IV, where both Sarah and her mother Birungi attend weekly
clinics, Annet Bintu, a psychological councillor, says they have tried to
reduce stigmatisation through counselling.
“We have 59 children who attend our clinics and we have fought stigmatisation
up to 65 per cent, which means out of 100 people, 65 can disclose their zero
status,” Bintu says.
According to John Thawite, the Kasese District HIV/Aids coordinator, stigmatisation is one of the biggest challenges they are facing in the fight against HIV/Aids.
“Some people have failed to disclose their status because of stigma from the public,” he says.
According to John Thawite, the Kasese District HIV/Aids coordinator, stigmatisation is one of the biggest challenges they are facing in the fight against HIV/Aids.
“Some people have failed to disclose their status because of stigma from the public,” he says.
As a mitigation measure, he says the district authorities have embarked on
counselling, especially to the young ones and married couples.
“We have also set up sub-county HIV/Aids committees where we train members to
support others. We further encourage teachers to talk about HIV/Aids in
classes,” he says.
He adds that as a district, they are about to release a five-year HIV/Aids plan
with more interventions, including carrying out a stigmatisation and discrimination
survey in the district.
“This survey on stigma and discrimination will give us a direction on more
strategies,” he adds.
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