
Red Cross home-based carer Mummsy Sithebe has seen many of her
clients pass away (p10144)
A
Red Cross nurse tends a mother dying of an AIDS-related disease.
At 40 per cent, Swaziland has the second highest HIV/AIDS prevalence
rate in the world (p9892)
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Southern Africa diary:
A week in the lives - Monday
July 2003
by John Sparrow and Selma Bernardi in Silele, Swaziland
Around 30 per cent of Swaziland’s
population will need humanitarian aid this year, even more than in
2002 when famine threatened Southern Africa. Driven by the AIDS pandemic,
the crisis extends beyond food and drought to breakdowns of community
and the coping capacities of families. Red Cross health clinics and
their home-based care services provide essential support for those
most at risk. A week in the lives in the hard-hit south shows why
the International Federation is appealing for US$10 million to strengthen
a safety net for vulnerable people across the region.
Monday
8am
Mummsy Sithebe is thinking about tomorrow’s funeral as she sets
off on her rounds in southern Swaziland. Funerals are more and more
frequent in this mountain kingdom of 980,000 people and Mummsy, a
38-year-old Red Cross volunteer, is seeing more than her share of
them. She has lost another client.
Her unpaid job providing home care to her scattered rural community,
particularly to people infected and affected by HIV/AIDS, brings Mummsy
face to face with tragedy. It isn’t clear what caused the latest
death but most of those she has dealt with have been AIDS-related.
Since official statistics reveal close to 40 per cent of the adult
population is HIV positive - almost certainly an underestimation -
it is understandable. AIDS deaths are growing daily.
8.30am
Mummsy walks down a rocky hillside track to a homestead of earth and
stone dwellings she visits daily. An old woman is waiting. Her name
is Grace and since March her world has been devastated. AIDS has claimed
her children and her grandchildren.
Like thousands of others in Swaziland, when AIDS began to debilitate
them, son Abraham, 45, and daughter Ntombikayise, 29, returned to
the homestead they were born in. Care could be found more easily there,
and the funerals would be cheaper. Ntombikayise brought her own children,
Muzi, 3, a gaunt little boy already ill, and five-month-old Valesa,
who soon would be.
Abraham died on a clear March morning. While Grace and the family
mourned around his body in one hut, Ntombikayise and the youngsters
lay chronically ill in another. Valesa, her little body wasted, died
the very same day. Muzi went a week later.
Their mother, once close to death, survived. Through the long dark
weeks that followed Mummsy cared for her. She nursed, cooked, cleaned,
listened and counselled. She helped the stricken Grace through her
anguish. She brought Red Cross food and hygiene parcels, ensured that
Ntombikayise had essential medicines. And, just as she did this morning,
saw to it she took them on time.
9.10am
Three months on, the woman can stand again. There are good days and
bad, and her steps are measured as she leaves the homestead. But this
morning she will take a bus to the nearest hospital. She will visit
a doctor and be dispensed a month’s supply of her drugs.
It isn’t a miracle. What laid her low was tuberculosis, the
opportunistic infection that accounts for a third of AIDS deaths worldwide.
Up to 50 per cent of people living with HIV/AIDS develop it, but treatment
is effective if timely and consistent. It needs to be. Tuberculosis
and HIV feed one another, and HIV is largely responsible for the accelerated
spread of TB in sub-Saharan Africa. In the course of a year, one case
of open pulmonary tuberculosis can, if untreated, affect another ten
to 15 people.
It calls for vigilance and the home-based care programme the Swaziland
Red Cross has introduced to this region has made care facilitators
like Mummsy the eyes and ears of the community. Besides providing
care, she is helping to prevent the spread of both diseases. Ntombikayise’s
case is a graphic example of why the Red Cross and Red Crescent insist
that TB and HIV interventions should go hand in hand. They are, the
World Health Organization says, “mutually reinforcing”.
Even in seemingly hopeless situations people living with HIV/AIDS
and TB can regain strength, and improve the quality and length of
their lives. Mummsy watches Ntombikayise leave for the hospital. Such
knowledge keeps her going.
Monday - Tuesday - Wednesday
- Thursday - Friday
Related links:
Southern Africa crisis
Reducing the impact of HIV/AIDS
News story: New reality requires
new strategy in southern Africa
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