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HIV-positive
health workers form union
PLUS
News
February 16, 2007
http://www.plusnews.org/AIDSreport.asp?ReportID=6709
HARARE - Working
as a medical professional in overburdened, poorly equipped healthcare
facilities facing chronic drug shortages, is hard enough. But when
you're HIV positive and also have to deal with stigma and discrimination
from your colleagues, it can become unbearable.
In response, the
Zimbabwe HIV and AIDS Activists Union (ZHAAU), headed by a group
of 15 HIV-positive doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers,
was launched last week in the capital, Harare, to support and lobby
for the rights of healthcare workers living with the virus.
ZHAAU has already
signed up 400 members, including professionals such as accountants,
teachers and engineers, and hopes to tackle the widespread stigmatisation
persisting in the workplace.
The interim president
of ZHAAU, Bernard Nyathi, said one would think that the health sector,
which is at the coalface of the country's AIDS epidemic, would be
a better environment to work in because medical professionals should
"know better", but this was not the case.
Nyathi, who works
as an HIV counsellor at Parirenyatwa Hospital in Harare, one of
the country's largest health facilities, has experienced this firsthand,
and told PlusNews how his colleagues began distancing themselves
from him when he publicly disclosed his HIV status, with some even
refusing to share staff toilets.
"Stigmatisation
is most noticeable at hospital canteens, where some workers do not
use utensils we use. Some bring their own cups and plates because
they don't want to use the ones we use, or do not come to the canteen
at all," he said.
In 2006 Nyathi
received the Auxilia Chimusoro Award for his work in advocating
for access to HIV treatment. Chimusoro was one of the first Zimbabweans
to make her HIV-positive status public.
No surveys have
been carried out to determine the prevalence of HIV in the health
sector, but in a country with one of the world's highest prevalence
figures, the impact of AIDS is particularly worrisome, considering
the overall shortage of health personnel.
Zimbabwe's health
delivery system has virtually collapsed in the last seven years
due to lack of foreign exchange to purchase drugs and medical equipment,
and a shortage of qualified personnel, who have fled low pay and
poor working conditions for greener pastures in other countries.
"These problems
make dealing with patients most difficult," said Nyathi.
ZHAAU secretary-general
Rebecca Kashiri, an HIV-positive nurse, believes health workers
living with HIV have been neglected, and their needs are being overlooked.
She called for health workers to be trained in how to treat, identify,
or care for people with HIV/AIDS. "Initially, I had a negative attitude
towards AIDS patients, but training changed me - it made me accept
all patients. I have no fear of patients anymore."
Itai Rusike, director
of the Community
Working Group of Health (CWGH), a local nongovernmental organisation
dealing with health matters in 25 of the country's districts, applauded
the formation of the union, saying it would go a long way towards
removing stigma. "[The union members] are HIV positive and also
in the health sector ... [the union] will definitely help others
who are HIV positive because they know how it feels."
Kashiri said,
"We want to have a say in issues affecting us. People who are not
positive do not know how it feels to be HIV positive."
ZHAAU is to meet
with Minister of Health and Child Welfare David Parirenyatwa in
the next two weeks, according to Nyathi. The union would urge the
minister to address stigma in the workplace, and also discuss how
union members could access antiretroviral treatment.
"Right now HIV-positive
people are having a hell of a time," he commented.
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