COVID-19 fight: Avoid Stigmatizing Persons Associated with the virus – Mental Health Authority
The Mental Health Authority (MHA) has advised the general public to desist from stigmatizing persons associated with Coronavirus because it can worsen the plight of patients during recovering period.
The Authority noted that even if the patients improved on their sicknesses, it can deter them from taking active part in enjoying life by engaging in daily businesses as usual, and this can worsen any underlying medical or mental health conditions.
This was contained in a statement signed by the Chief Executive of the MHA, Dr. Akwasi Osei, and issued in Accra on Friday. It urges the general public to stop the stigma against COVID-19 patients.
“Stigma is when one is tagged for shame and discrimination for having a condition. Stigma arises out of fear, the fear is from ignorance and the ignorance leads to our avoidant behavior and attitude of rejection. When you stigmatise, you are telling us that you do not have enough information about the condition. Seek knowledge,” the statement read.
It urged Ghanaians to keep observing the personal hygiene principles like handwashing, use of hand sanitizers, observing social distancing, covering of mouth when coughing or sneezing, eating healthily, staying at home as much as possible and wearing of face-mask when going out.
“Respect coronavirus but do not panic – Covid-19 is not a death sentence. Do not stigmatise and build your resilience to withstand all stigma,” the Chief Executive advised.
Below is the Full statement issued by the Mental Health Authority
Message from the Mental Health Authority Let Us Avoid Stigma of
Covid-19
It is now certain that for the next couple of weeks and perhaps months, Covid-19 is the new visitor we have got to live with, like it or not. Since 12 March 2020 when the first two cases were recorded in Ghana, the Minister for Information has announced that as of 22 April 2020 we now have 1,154 cases with 120 recovered and nine deaths. The number of cases is expected to increase as the test results of the backlog of samples taken trickle in and enhanced contact tracings and testing are done.
As our containment measures are reaping fruits with very low mortality rate of 0.78% compared with the world trend of 4% the concern, however, is the stigma associated with persons with Covid-19. A survivor gave his story that after his recovery, he and his family know no peace because of stigma. A health worker has also reported that a landlady of a colleague she visited in uniform threatened to evict her for ‘you nurses go to hospital and bring the Covid disease to us’. A taxi driver refused to take her in her uniform.
Stigma is when one is tagged for shame and discrimination for having a condition. Stigma arises out of fear, the fear is from ignorance and the ignorance leads to our avoidant behavior and attitude of rejection. When you stigmatise, you are telling us that you do not have enough information about the condition. Seek knowledge.
Stigma has three forms: the public stigma which you receive from the public because you have the condition; self-stigma which you associate with yourself because you have it; and association or courtesy stigma which others close to you receive because of your condition. Stigma puts affected persons under stress and this can worsen their plight and make it difficult to improve from the Covid-19 and if they improve, can deter them from taking active part in enjoying their lives, from engaging in their daily business, and can worsen any underlying medical or mental health condition. We need to stop stigmatising people. Stigma can prevent people from seeking help knowing that they will be stigmatised. Then they will harbour the condition, suffer the consequence in silence and spread it to others. This will defeat our efforts to combat this enemy, the coronavirus. Let us stop the stigma for tomorrow it could be you.
While urging all to stop public stigma, people affected should also watch against self-stigma, increase your resilience to ignore the public stigma and tell yourself that you have been blessed to have survived and no amount of stigma from the public can discourage you from enjoying your health and freedom from the virus.
Keep observing the personal hygiene principles of handwashing, hand sanitization and social distancing. Cover your mouth when coughing or sneezing, eat healthily, stay at home as much as possible and wear your face-mask when going out. Respect coronavirus but do not panic – Covid-19 is not a death sentence. Do not stigmatise and build your resilience to withstand all stigma.
Dr. Akwasi Osei,
Chief Executive, Mental Health Authority,
23 April 2020 (Contact: 0509914046, 0206814666)
Source: Eric Nii Sackey || ghananewsonline.com.gh