Ex-Covid-19 patients share experience on Facebook to address stigma
COVID-19 | A former Covid-19 patient, Hartini Azmi, 37, has set up a Facebook page under the name "Covid-19 Survivor Sabah" to eliminate the stigma in society towards those who contracted the virus but have since recovered.
The Facebook page shares the experiences of Covid-19 patients who beat the disease and are back in society, but whose presence is not welcomed.
Hartini, who set up the Facebook page last month, said having experienced the situation herself, she felt the need to make the public aware that former Covid-19 patients are not a threat to society, hence, they should not be "feared" or avoided.
The Kampung Maasak resident in Keningau shared one of her experiences. It was at a hair salon where she had to wait for a long time to be attended to because the hairdressers there were afraid to do her hair for fear of getting the coronavirus from her.
“I waited for so long for my hair to be washed, but no one came. It turned out that they were scared that I might (still) be carrying the virus,” she told Bernama when contacted today.
Since the page was created, many Covid-19 patients, including those who have recovered, shared their stories and experiences, and many netizens empathised with them and their families.
Hartini also initiated a Whatsapp group to motivate patients, as well as share with them safety tips from her days in quarantine.
Meanwhile, Ella Hipin, 36, from Kampung Bariawa Ulu, Keningau, who also tested positive with Covid-19, as well as a few others from her family, said they were looked upon like “angels of death”.
“The pressure from society is more distressful than knowing that I was infected with the Covid-19 virus,” she added.
She said the most painful incident was when she ordered for groceries advertised by one of her friends on Whatsapp groups.
“When the person knew the order was from us, we were told that the items we wanted were sold out,” she said, adding that a similar situation was faced by her other family members who were only persons under investigation (PUI) for Covid-19.
Flavia Pius, 38, from Tambunan, said she was emotionally affected when an image of her in an ambulance, after she was found positive with Covid-19, became viral.
“I was really depressed, and it made me feel worse when I got to know that even the delivery persons were scared to go near my car.
“However, the situation has changed now, probably due to better public awareness on Covid-19,” she added.
- Bernama
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