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Botswana: care for caregivers at new
centre
A new centre in Botswana is piloting some innovate
strategies to address the emotional and medical needs of HIV/AIDS
healthcare providers. The Tshedisa Institute in the capital, Gaborone,
is the brainchild of several doctors working in the local private and
public health sectors, who recognised the need to provide healthcare
workers, exhausted and overworked by the country's HIV/AIDS epidemic,
with more support. Dr Ava Avalos has worked at the Princess Marina
Hospital's Infectious Diseases Care Clinic (IDCC) since it opened in
2003. Now one of the largest HIV/AIDS clinics in the world, the IDCC
provides ARV treatment to over 14,000 patients as part of the national
programme. "As the IDCC grew, we could just see how doctors and nurses
were feeling overwhelmed," recalled Avalos. "We had tried to do some
interventions here for patients, like dance classes and support groups,
and we realised what we also needed was something for the healthcare
providers."
Avalos said many caregivers were also not coming
forward for HIV testing and treatment because they were reluctant to
share long queues at the IDCC with their patients and feared
stigmatisation by their co-workers. A place was needed where nurses and
doctors could be tested and treated quickly and confidentially, as they
were often waiting too long before seeking help. A private practitioner
offered the use of a building within walking distance of the IDCC to
accommodate the centre, while Rotary International helped pay for
renovations and the planting of a therapeutic garden. Doctors,
counsellors and therapists have volunteered to contribute their time to
the institute until more funding can be found. The centre opened last
month and so far only has about 50 clients, but once the word has
spread, "I think we'll be swamped," said Phildah Cele, who counselled
HIV/AIDS caregivers and patients for several years before working as a
volunteer at Tshedisa.
Healthcare workers have been dealing with fewer
patient deaths since Botswana's national ARV treatment programme started
in 2003, yet "the level of suffering they're exposed to day in, day out
is really hard for most people to comprehend. The reality is, it's not a
normal thing, and it's not something human beings should have to cope
with without support," Avalos commented. Like every other country in the
region, Botswana has a shortage of healthcare providers in the public
sector, adding to the burden of those working with HIV/AIDS. Staff
shortages often create a vicious cycle in which overworked doctors and
nurses succumb to stress and burn out at an even higher rate. "It's not
just the job that's stressful," said one of the nurses at Princess
Marina's IDCC, "it's that we need more money and more staff."
Avalos said healthcare providers often coped well with
work-related stress until something happened in their personal lives: a
sick relative or an abusive spouse could act as the tipping point that
made stress at work unbearable, but at Tshedisa they could talk to a
clinical psychologist, join a support group or participate in various
therapy classes, including dance, art, poetry and drama.
Stigmatisation of HIV-positive people was surprisingly
high among healthcare workers, said Diana Dickinson, the doctor who
donated the building and now volunteers at the centre. Nurses and
doctors among her patients were also most likely to default on
treatment. Cele has also noticed the difficulty HIV/AIDS healthcare
providers have in accepting their positive status: "With HIV, it's easy
to talk about it until it knocks at your own door, then it's another
issue all together. They don't disclose [their status] to their
co-workers."
Part of Tshedisa's strategy is to offer training to
organisations interested in developing their own 'Care for the
Caregiver' programmes. The institute receives no funding from the
Ministry of Health, but Dickinson hopes it will eventually come on board
and the centre will serve as a pilot project that can be duplicated in
other parts of the country.
UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
5 June 2006
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