Source:
Jamaica Gleaner
Executive
director of the Jamaica AIDS Support for Life (JASL), Kandasi Levermore, last
week declared that she is deeply concerned about this development.
"When
we have a one client where we experience this type of situation, we usually try
and do a one-on-one; but I have three clients in St James, another two in St
Ann and another three in Kingston where, basically, they went to church and
they were prayed for, and they were told they were healed, and they are not
taking their medications," said Levermore.
"I
don't treat the majority of people living with HIV, it is just a little group
of people that access the JASL treatment programme. Remember that you have at
least 20 times more that access public health, so you don't even know what is
happening there,"
she told The Sunday Gleaner.
Levermore,
who is a Christian, said she does not doubt that people can be healed through
spirituality, but she notes that in many of the cases, the individuals had not
sought to verify their change in status by getting tested.
"So
when we reach out to them, they are missing out on care, they are not coming to
the clinic and they are getting worse, their outcomes are declining," she lamented.
MISINFORMED
"If
we come upon a miracle story, trust me, we are going to say it, but we are
saying, don't misinform the clients and tell them that they are healed, and the
people end up not taking their medications and not going to the doctor," added Levermore.
She also
worries for the spouses or sexual partners of these individuals, as their viral
loads could increase as a result of them aborting treatment. Viral load is the
term used to describe the amount of HIV in the blood.
Levermore
noted that some HIV/AIDS-positive persons are so convinced of their healing by
pastors that they have refused any sort of assistance from the JASL. One of
these individuals, she said, was considered a model patient because of the
progress he has been making in reducing his viral loads.
"He
was doing so well that he was one of the model clients that would facilitate
some of the treatment literacy workshops with us. He would be the model patient
that would be able to say to the clients, 'When you are feeling this way, this
is what you would do', because he lived it," she said.
"Now
not even the psychologist can get through to this person," Levermore pointed out.
She said
further investigations have shown that many of these individuals had attended
one of the new evangelical Christian churches where the miracle healing was
reportedly done.
CONCERNS
"The
truth is, it is not within what we know as church when we were growing
up," she
explained.
The Jamaica
Council of Churches has been informed of the concerns of the JASL and has
agreed to meet with Levermore to discuss the issue on February 19.
Efforts to
have dialogue with the leaders of some of the less traditional churches have
not been as fruitful.
"We
are writing specific churches, because we got specific reports, to have a sit
down with the leadership of those churches. We haven't received any kind of
positive response,"
said Levermore.
UN Special
Envoy on HIV/AIDS to the Caribbean, Dr. Edward Greene, revealed last year that
Jamaica and Cuba have both seen major increases in HIV infections.
He noted
that after 10 years of decline in the prevalence rate, the Caribbean has
witnessed a nine per cent increase in new infections.
The country
is currently working towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goal of
ending AIDS as a public- health threat by 2030 and other international targets,
but this could be stymied if persons stop taking their medication and are not
healed.
"You
can't force anybody to take medicine in Jamaica. But what I am asking for is
some amount of responsibility on the spiritual leaders to know that you
shouldn't be the person to put somebody's health at risk," said Levermore.
FAST FACTS:
- There is
currently no cure for HIV, although antiretroviral treatment can control it.
- Most
research is towards a 'functional cure' where HIV is reduced to undetectable
and harmless levels permanently, but some residual virus may still be present
in the body.
- Some
research is looking for a 'sterilising cure' where all HIV is eradicated from
the body, but this is more complex and risky.
- Trials of
HIV vaccines are encouraging, but even once developed will only offer partial
protection.
No comments:
Post a Comment