Somalis stigma impedes HIV treatment.

Are you against HIV/AIDS awareness campaigns?

  • Yes

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • No

    Votes: 14 100.0%

  • Total voters
    14
Status
Not open for further replies.
Stigma impedes HIV treatment in Somalia
by Hamza Mohamed
29 Sept 2013
2013922151032174734_20.jpg

Being HIV positive in Somalia means doing everything in one's power to stay invisible [AP]
Mogadishu, Somalia - In a small dark room in Mogadishu's Banaadir Hospital, a group of patients sits quietly on wooden chairs waiting to collect their monthly medication ration.

They're all HIV positive. The medicine they are given is anti-retroviral (ARV) drugs.

The female patients wear a face veil while the men cover their mouths with scarves and mostly look down, dodging eye contact. They all avoid answering their phones when at the hospital, as they don't want someone in the room or nearby to recognise their voices.

In Somalia having AIDS or being HIV positive means doing everything in one's power to stay invisible. The identity of HIV/AIDS patients at Banaadir Hospital is kept secret. Nurses call the patients using identity numbers instead of names.

201392215113143360_20.jpg

The number of HIV-positive patients in Somalia is unknown [AP]


A father of five children, Abdirahman - whose surname was not used to protect his identity - said he contracted HIV from his previous wife who passed away in 2001. He has good reason for wanting to stay anonymous.

"I was naïve and told my neighbours I'm HIV positive when I was first diagnosed, expecting they will sympathise with me," said Abdirahman, shaking his head in regret.

"Hours later, all my neighbours moved out and my children were kicked out from the local school because their father is HIV positive."

Soft-spoken with a greying goatee, Abdirahman, 43, looks older than his age. He found out he had the virus after going to the hospital for tuberculosis treatment.

Sitting opposite him is 25-year-old mother-of-five Rahma. She contracted HIV when dentists at her local clinic used unsterilised equipment to remove a bad tooth. She was diagnosed HIV-positive 11 months ago and is still coming to terms with her condition.

"I'm still in shock of why this happened to me and why they did this to me," Rahma said, tears filling her eyes. "I only told my husband and we agreed we won't tell no one else, even our parents. If we tell our families they will abandon us and our children."

Aggressive
awareness campaign

Somalia's health system has been destroyed by the civil war that's raged for more than 20 years. The capital Mogadishu has many hospitals - both private and those funded by international organisations - but until recently none offered free treatment to HIV-positive patients.

Patients in Mogadishu used to go to Merca, a town more than 90 kilometres away, to seek treatment. Most couldn't afford the fares for the journey. Recently a local organisation, South Central Relief Network (SCRN), opened its first office in Mogadishu's Banadir Hospital to cater specifically to HIV/AIDs patients. Currently it provides free treatment to 132 patients who are HIV positive.

"The number of people with HIV in Somalia is increasing," said Mohamed Siad, head counselor at SCRN. "We now receive between five to seven new patients a day. They are referred to us from the hospital."

The exact number of people living with HIV/AIDS in Somalia is unknown.

According to the Somali government, one percent of the country's estimated nine million population is HIV positive. In 2011, UNAIDS estimated the number of people living with HIV in Somalia to be 35,000.

The number of patients coming to SCRN in their Mogadishu clinic is increasing, thanks in part to an aggressive awareness campaign.

We are a private hospital and to treat HIV positive or AIDS patients will be economic suicide.

-Dr Abdulkadir Sheikh, Hanano Hospital, Mogadishu

"We have placed advertisements on TV and local FM radio stations to raise awareness, to tell people they don't have to suffer in silence," said Mohamed, who himself is HIV positive.

But the awareness campaign is not without its challenges.

"Some TV channels and radio stations refused to accept our ads for fear of been stigmatised," said Mohamed.

Most of those coming to the HIV/AIDS clinic in Mogadishu are too poor to buy the medication elsewhere.

Those who can afford to travel abroad for treatment usually do so, in order to keep their condition private.

"People come to us to do blood tests. They then call to ask for the result," explained Omar Abdi of the Fathu Rahma Laboratory and Pharmacy. "If they're positive they never come back but go to Kenya for treatment."

Private hospitals and pharmacies in Mogadishu avoid stocking HIV/AIDs medication.

"We are a private hospital and if those patients not suffering from HIV or AIDS found out we treat people with AIDS or HIV in our hospital, they will all discharge themselves and we won't have any patients and we won't have any business after that," said Dr Abdulkadir Sheikh of Hanano Hospital.

"We are a private hospital and to treat HIV positive or AIDs patients will be economic suicide."

Stigma of AIDS

In Somalia, HIV/AIDS is associated with promiscuity and in conservative Muslim society, it's proving difficult to convince many to come out and seek treatment.

"Because of our religion and people wanting to protect their family name, no one wants to have the community thinking they go around sleeping with everyone, especially prostitutes," Mohamed said.

The new internationally recognised government, which took office in September last year, has encouraged patients to get treatment despite the social stigma attached.

"We offer training to hospital staff, we also do the same for the community to increase their knowledge of HIV/AIDS," said Sadia Abdisamad, HIV/AIDs National Program Manager at the department of health.

"We have put billboards in the city, placed ads on radios. Our focus is to increase awareness to try and stop the spread of the disease, and to make people come out and seek treatment without fear of been stigmatised," she said.

Despite such attempts by the government and local organisations, it may be a long time before the stigma and fear associated with HIV/AIDs in Somalia is overcome.

"Somalis are more scared of HIV than bombs, so fearful they will not accept to be in the same building as someone with HIV," said Abdirahman.

Now, all he wants is to be left alone in peace to look after his five children. "I'm very weak and in the final years of my life, I want to be left alone to raise my kids without harassment," he said.

 
Last edited:
This is heart breaking to read. The stigma is unreal. I bet they don't sell condoms in the country which would greatly reduce the spread of the disease.
 
Most of the guys that have contracted HIV say they got it from their wives. Most of them have busting nuts in dirty hoes in or from other African countries.

I didn't know the situation was that tragic. The hospital will loose business for offering medication to the HIV positive :farmajoyaab:.
 
Most of the guys that have contracted HIV say they got it from their wives. Most of them have busting nuts in dirty hoes in or from other African countries.

I didn't know the situation was that tragic. The hospital will loose business for offering medication to the HIV positive :farmajoyaab:.

They're lying. Prostitution is rife in Somalia.
 
They're lying. Prostitution is rife in Somalia.

These faraax's are on some next level stuff. In kenya the are nutting in dirty prostitutes. They even made them wear niqaabs :deadpeter: See the video.



But yes, there is definitely prostitution in Somalia. It is naive to suggest otherwise, you will find it every nation no matter how conservative it is.
 
These faraax's are on some next level stuff. In kenya the are nutting in dirty prostitutes. They even made them wear niqaabs :deadpeter: See the video.



But yes, there is definitely prostitution in Somalia. It is naive to suggest otherwise, you will find it every nation no matter how conservative it is.

Yeah I watched that video. I think Somalis travelling to Kenya and Ethiopia and sleeping with prostitutes there have contributed to the spread of the disease. There are prostitutes in every Somali town. Hunger forces women to do it.
 

RasCanjero-

Self imposed exile
Somalia has one of the lowest HIV prevalence rate in the southern hemisphere.

Most likely because those that have it in Somalia won't survive long enough to spread it.

Not sure if that's a negative or positive.
 
Someone is hiv positive :lolbron:
You don't have permission to view the spoiler content. Log in or register now.
HIV is not a joke fam.
:farmajoyaab:


This semester we have the community placement. Somali patients look like they saw the devil when they see you are Somali heath care provider attending to them. Their facial expression changes the second they see your face. I had to post this because the Somali community likes to keep their HIV status hidden and would rather infect their wives than seek treatment.
 

Xooshdheere

how do i use this
These faraax's are on some next level stuff. In kenya the are nutting in dirty prostitutes. They even made them wear niqaabs :deadpeter: See the video.



But yes, there is definitely prostitution in Somalia. It is naive to suggest otherwise, you will find it every nation no matter how conservative it is.
thats disgusting, how can men sleep with these apes
 
Yeah I watched that video. I think Somalis travelling to Kenya and Ethiopia and sleeping with prostitutes there have contributed to the spread of the disease. There are prostitutes in every Somali town. Hunger forces women to do it.

Is this bantu,oromo and xamar cad cad women? Cause I would think no normal tribe would ever let their women go into prostitution, personally I would rather eat dust and air for dinner than see a fellow somali female being a prostitute out of hunger
 
Is this bantu,oromo and xamar cad cad women? Cause I would think no normal tribe would ever let their women go into prostitution, personally I would rather eat dust and air for dinner than see a fellow somali female being a prostitute out of hunger

All of the above plus lamagoodles.
 

yasmin lan

Satans step daughter
This is heart breaking to read. The stigma is unreal. I bet they don't sell condoms in the country which would greatly reduce the spread of the disease.
Somalis make everything seems taboo I bet half the women back home don’t know what birth control is
 
Somalis make everything seems taboo I bet half the women back home don’t know what birth control is

To their detriment. There are women who have sex outside of marriage without a condom (not available in the country) and because abortions are not available they carry the baby to term and abandon them in the hospital or at an orphanage. Something has to change.
 

yasmin lan

Satans step daughter
To their detriment. There are women who have sex outside of marriage without a condom (not available in the country) and because abortions are not available they carry the baby to term and abandon them in the hospital or at an orphanage. Something has to change.
Wallahi it does and the men back home and the ones in the are against sex Ed classes for the teen and women because they know the moment they’re self aware of their options they can’t trap them into have 10+ kids
 
Wallahi it does and the men back home and the ones in the are against sex Ed classes for the teen and women because they know the moment they’re self aware of their options they can’t trap them into have 10+ kids

To expand their clan, sad state of affairs. Runtii we need sex classes and condoms to reduce the alarming rates unwanted pregnancies and STDs.
 
Especially Ethiopia women who come as maids and shit.

Yeah they are often prostitutes and were prostitutes in Ethiopia. They all claim the father of their children is dead when the truth is that the kids were born to different fathers due to prostitution.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Trending

Latest posts

Top