Passing the Buck

来源 :Beijing Review | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:nihao99520
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  Xie Jun (pseudonym), a patient with advanced lung cancer and in need of an urgent operation, was rejected by a hospital after disclosing, just before the operation, that he has HIV.
  Xie published his account on the microblogging site Weibo on November 18, right after he was turned away for the operation. Just one year earlier, the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) named the hospital that rejected Xie—Xiangya Hospital of Central South University in Changsha, central China’s Hunan Province—as a model hospital that had never rejected a patient diagnosed with AIDS.
  The episode caused uproar among those living with HIV/AIDS in China and restarted a conversation in health circles about how to safely operate on high-risk patients.
  A popular female activist called Miss Yue on Weibo forwarded Xie’s post with the comments,“It is a shame for a hospital with such an award to reject patients who are HIV positive. We need an apology, and the hospital needs to operate on this patient immediately.”
  The incident came shortly before World AIDS Day, a UN event intended to raise awareness for people living with HIV/AIDS. The National Center for AIDS/STD Control and Prevention under the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention released its updated HIV and AIDS statistics on November 30. According to the release, 575,000 people had been infected with HIV or AIDS in China as of the end of October, up from the 437,700 reported in 2013. Of those cases, 97,000 were newly reported between January and October.
  Some HIV/AIDS activists warn that occurrences like the one at the hospital that turned Xie Jun away are likely to happen with more frequency.
   Isolation
  Xiaoqiang, another activist living with AIDS in Shanghai, revealed on his Weibo that almost every HIV-positive patient has had experiences similar to Xie Jun.
  “We definitely tell the doctors about our conditions before receiving treatment, but it has always caused unnecessary worries and then we get rejected,” Xiaoqiang said. “In most cases, they change the treatment method from an operation to a more ‘conservative’ one, which largely reduces their contact with us.”
  Miss Yue, who also has AIDS, wrote on her blog that such worries are mainly a symptom of people’s biased stereotypes of people living with HIV/AIDS. “In their eyes, we are just bad people that have sex randomly with other people or take excessive drugs, so they think we deserve this. I don’t know why this disease is so closely related to a moral standard. Other diseases, such as hepatitis B, are transmitted through the same channels as AIDS, but those patients are seldom rejected.”   Meng Lin, the longest surviving person with AIDS in China, was diagnosed at the end of 1995. At that time, there was no treatment available in China for people living with HIV/AIDS, and everyone in the hospital, medical staff and patients alike, had little knowledge of the disease and were subsequently terrified of it.
  Finally, Meng was accepted by the Beijing You’an Hospital, which specializes in infectious diseases. The hospital was trying to develop AIDS treatments that incorporated traditional Chinese medicine.
  Meng and a few other people with AIDS were kept in isolated, sunless wards next to the hospital morgue for three months. At night, they were locked indoors in case “we might go out and do harm to the society.”
  “Faced with widespread discrimination and the huge stigma attached to being HIV-positive, I lost all hope,” Meng wrote sharing his experience in the newsletter Our Voice published by the China Alliance of People Living With HIV/ AIDS in 2009.
  “Our country has provided free medicine to people living with HIV/AIDS since 2003. Before that we either waited to die or spent a huge amount of money to buy medicine from abroad,” said Meng, who was able to come up with the funds and had friends who could get the medicine for him.
  After the disease was under control, Meng went back to his normal life and became a successful businessman and founded Ark of Love, an organization that aims to inform and help those living with HIV/AIDS organize and set up their own structures to give each other help and defend their liberties.
  But Meng’s life took a turn for the worse in 2005 after a TV program showed his face and made his health status public without his permission. He told China Youth Daily in November 2013 that his business partners left him, along with his friends, and that he had to sell his company and become a full-time volunteer at the Ark of Love.
  “I have been living for 20 years with AIDS and have tried to commit suicide quite a few times. I know what people living with HIV/AIDS really need and my story alone is encouraging enough to help them pick up hope and live on,”Meng said.
  In 2008, UNAIDS in China gave Meng an award for “an outstanding contribution in the field of AIDS.” He was also given the Barry and Martin’s Trust prize, the first time the charity organization’s prize had been awarded to an individual with AIDS.
  Having witnessed at first hand the arrival of the epidemic in China, and the development of the government’s response to it, Meng said that the current situation is much better now that people have more knowledge on HIV/AIDS. But the stigma attached to disease is still stubborn and needs more time to be removed.    Discrimination
  To help combat the stigma and discrimination people living with HIV/AIDS face at hospitals, the Chinese Government issued a regulation in 2006 stating that no hospital can reject these people and that they will face punishment if they do, but it failed to detail exactly what that punishment would be. Hospitals all over the country claim that they never reject patients with HIV/AIDS, but the facts paint a different picture.
  In September 2012, Meng was denied a CT scan by a Beijing doctor. Two months after that, Xiaofeng, the pseudonym of another person with AIDS and in need of a lung operation after being diagnosed with lung cancer, was turned away by a hospital. Li Hu, former head of Haihe Star, a Tianjin-based NGO that helps people living with HIV/AIDS in local communities, helped Xiaofeng change his medical records to conceal his HIV-positive status, which allowed him to finally get the operation.
  Li later posted the story online, igniting a debate about the frequency with which patients with HIV/AIDS are denied medical treatment.
  Li Keqiang, then Vice Premier and now Premier of the State Council, China’s cabinet, took up the cause after learning of Xiaofeng’s case in the media.
  In November 2012, Li Keqiang sat down with Li Hu and other 12 NGOs that provide assistance to people living with HIV/AIDS. “We are excited to express all of the medical obstacles that people living with HIV/AIDS face,” Li Hu told China News Service at the time. “But I know the situation will not be very optimistic as the discrimination we face is steadfast and solid.”
  On August 6, 2014, Li Hu, who himself had AIDS, passed away at the Beijing You’an Hospital, one day after his 40th birthday. Though he was seen as a controversial subject in the general public, many people associated with the HIV/AIDS plight saw him as a hero.
  “He did a lot to fight against patients being rejected for medical treatments,” said Xiaoqiang on his Weibo. “Only we know how harsh and difficult it is and it is still going on.”
  On November 3, a 17-year-old named Xiaolin, who is HIV-positive, operated on himself at home in Xi’an, Shaanxi Province, with a pair of scissors after several hospitals rejected to treat his genital warts.
  “I felt hopeless and could not find an alternative way,” he told Wu Yong, Director of a local HIV/AIDS NGO Home of Love.
  Wu tried to connect the young man with other hospitals but all of them refused to treat Xiaolin after learning about his conditions.
  “Patients and doctors are like two sides of a coin. Both have their own rights and concerns, some are contradictory and some consistent. The interests of both groups are based on information transparency,” Chen Wei, Assistant Director of the Department of Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition of Peking Union Medical College Hospital in Beijing, told Xinhua Daily Telegraph on December 1.
  Chen has been treating people living with HIV/AIDS for more than 10 years. He thinks the current predicaments concerning medical services for patients with HIV/AIDS are caused by regulatory flaws.
  “Under current regulations, doctors are allowed to redirect patients with HIV/AIDS to hospitals that specialize in infectious diseases, but those hospitals are often not qualified to perform the major surgeries that the patients often need,” Chen said.
其他文献
Tanzania is one of the least developed countries in the world and its outdated infrastructure severely impedes its economic development, according to the United Nations. It had no national broadband n
期刊
Captains of foreign industries gathered at the warm capital of south China’s Guangdong Province, Guangzhou, to set forth plans for increased investment and cooperation in China. This year, “innovation
期刊
All eyes are on Paris this month to see if a post-2020 legally binding and universal agreement can be reached to confront climate change and its disastrous effects.  As the international climate chang
期刊
A law promoting China’s film industry, first drafted 12 years ago, is now one step closer to being enacted, after the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s top legislature, finished soliciting opi
期刊
Military reform measures rolled out by Chinese President Xi Jinping in late November have stirred intense scrutiny abroad.  The news has brought up concerns by some foreign media over China’s possible
期刊
During the Johannesburg Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation(FOCAC), held in South Africa on December 4-5, Chinese President Xi Jinping and African leaders reached consensus on lifting Chin
期刊
Dr. Adams Bodomo dislikes the phrase“Sino-African.” “It’s a question of symmetry and focus,” the professor of African Studies at the University of Vienna explained carefully from his office in Austria
期刊
Africa’s ability to achieve sustainable economic growth will depend on a functioning green economy capable of serving the needs of its growing population. As they work to create stronger economies tha
期刊
Sometimes the numbers don’t tell the whole story when it comes to major societal, cultural and economic shifts. That is most certainly true as we try to measure the impact of Singles Day in China and
期刊
Ratsizakaina Isaia Herimialy has traveled thousands of miles from her home in Madagascar, an island country off the southeastern coast of the African continent, to China with one goal: to learn the Ch
期刊