Preparing communities to receive persons recently suspected or diagnosed with COVID-19
Martin Lubega, John Emoit Ekol
Corresponding author: Martin Lubega, Soroti Regional Referral Hospital, Soroti District, Eastern Uganda
Received: 30 Apr 2020 - Accepted: 04 May 2020 - Published: 05 May 2020
Domain: Public Health Nursing
Keywords: COVID-19, stigmatization, Uganda
This article is published as part of the supplement PAMJ Special issue on COVID - 19 in Africa, commissioned by The Pan African Medical Journal.
©Martin Lubega et al. Pan African Medical Journal (ISSN: 1937-8688). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Cite this article: Martin Lubega et al. Preparing communities to receive persons recently suspected or diagnosed with COVID-19. Pan African Medical Journal. 2020;35(2):21. [doi: 10.11604/pamj.supp.2020.35.2.23202]
Available online at: https://www.panafrican-med-journal.com//content/series/35/2/21/full
Letter to the editors
Preparing communities to receive persons recently suspected or diagnosed with COVID-19
Preparing communities to receive persons recently suspected or diagnosed with COVID-19
Martin Lubega1,2,&, John Emoit Ekol1
1Soroti Regional Referral Hospital, Soroti District, Eastern Uganda, 2Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda
&Corresponding author
Martin Lubega, Soroti Regional Referral Hospital, Soroti District, Eastern Uganda
Ever since the first case of COVID-19 was reported in Uganda, there are increasing number of reports of acts of discrimination and public stigmatization against rest travelers, people from areas affected by the epidemic, and those in quarantine. Unfortunately, this means that such people are being labelled, stereotyped, discriminated [1] and in worse situations mob justice has prevailed. It is so rejuvenating that some of our people that were recently diagnosed with COVID-19 are healing and are being discharged back home. This is a great milestone and spikes a ray of hope in our joint efforts to fight the pandemic in our country. However, there is a concern on how welcome these are into the communities. How prepared the families and communities are to receive such persons amidst the prevailing stigmatization of the disease in the public remains a very big question.
A case at hand is of a 30 year old female who returned from Kenya a few weeks back to her rented room in Kigandani village, Eastern Division in Soroti district. The surveillance team at Soroti regional referral hospital was notified of her return by the landlord and community leaders, she was picked up and put in the hospital quarantine for 14 days. In the due course, she was tested and found negative twice. Soon it was time for her to be discharged and return to the community. As a protocol here, the psychosocial team of the hospital surveillance and case management committee made a resettlement visit to the community to brief and prepare them to receive this lady prior to her discharge. From the interaction, community leaders, residents, and her landlord refused the team from discharging her back to their community in fear that she may still develop symptoms any time and infect them. They argued that she should be handed over to her family in her home village. Great resistance came from the landlord who insisted that other tenants were going to leave the rentals if this lady came back to the same rentals. It was such a trying moment for the hospital team led by the hospital´s principal mental health clinician that all their efforts to explain to the community were futile. At the end of it all the lady was discharged with another colleague from quarantine who was willing to stay with her in the meantime as she contacted relatives to pick her.
This scenario sends signals of how much we need to continue sensitizing communities about COVID-19. It´s therefore of great importance that all hospitals handling suspects and those with the disease consider having a prior resettlement visit for every patient or suspect to prepare the community. This is important in preventing stigma that may be projected to such persons after discharge. Media houses should also continue sensitizing the public, at times its lack of information and misinformation that breeds and propagates such stigma. Stigma could potentially contribute to more severe health problems, ongoing transmission, and jeopardizes the efforts to control the outbreak [2]. We all have an important role to play in preventing and stopping stigma. We all need to be intentional and thoughtful of the information shared on social media and other communication platforms. There is need to ensure these are facts: stigma can be heightened by insufficient knowledge on how the disease is transmitted and treated, and how to prevent infection. Media reporting should therefore be balanced and contextualized to ensure dissemination of evidence-based information to help combat rumors and misinformation that could lead to stigmatization [2]. Gather information at regular intervals, from WHO website and Ministry of health platforms, in order to help you distinguish facts from rumors. Facts can help to minimize fears.
The authors declare no competing interests.
John Emoit Ekol collected the data about the patient and community reaction. Martin Lubega wrote the letter. Both authors were directly involved in the surveillance and management of the case and have agreed on the letter.
We thank Dr. Stephen Legesi Pande, the head of the COVID-19 surveillance team at Soroti Regional Referral Hospital for reviewing the letter.
- IFRC, UNICEF, WHO. Social stigma associated with COVID-19. 2020. Accessed 30 April 2020.
- World Health Organization (WHO). Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19): Situation Report 35. 2020. Accessed 30 April 2020.
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