Egyptian
Initiative for Personal Rights
Health and Human
Rights Program
Press Release-
29 January 2007
Negligence
Apparent Cause of Death for Woman Living with HIV
The Egyptian
Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR) today called upon the Ministry of
Health to launch an urgent investigation into the death on 25 January of
Samia,
a 33-year-old woman who was living with HIV. According to information
received by the EIPR-which has been following her case closely-Samia did not
die of AIDS-related illness. Rather, her death apparently resulted from
serious negligence and ineptitude and from denial of basic healthcare
services at the AIDS ward of the Abbasiya Fevers Hospital in Northern Cairo.
A widow and
mother of three, Samia died ten days after admission to the hospital
complaining from increasing severe pain in her stomach, headaches and
constant vomiting and diarrhea. Throughout her stay at the Abbasiya
Hospital, the government health facility designated for care and treatment
of people living with HIV and AIDS in Cairo, Samia’s health continued to
rapidly deteriorate without sufficient attention or care from the hospital’s
medical personnel. According to family members and friends who accompanied
Samia during her last days, the AIDS ward of the hospital lacked equipment
and medicines and Samia had to buy her own medications from outside
pharmacies. She was not receiving enough fluids to keep her hydrated, and
the doctors and nurses on call often were unavailable for examination or
care. Samia’s adherence to her anti-retroviral treatment was also not
monitored during her stay at the hospital. Moreover, the sanitary levels at
the ward were dismal – the ward was not being cleaned, the bed sheets were
not changed and hot water was not available. Eventually, Samia’s body gave
in and her family and friends were told by a hospital doctor that the
constant vomiting and diarrhea were the cause of her death.
“We have known
Samia for months before her tragic death and she was a strong, resolved
woman struggling to raise her three children alone after her husband’s
death,” said Dr. Ragia Elgerzawy of EIPR’s Health and Human Rights Program.
“We have strong reasons to believe that AIDS did not kill Samia-- negligence
did.”
Samia had
suffered a great ordeal in the months leading to her death. In October 2006,
Samia had an ultrasound examination which showed that she had three stones
in the gall bladder that needed to be surgically removed. She spent three
months trying unsuccessfully to find a doctor or a health facility willing
to perform her surgery since many doctors and hospitals refused to admit or
operate on her after learning she was living with HIV in violation of
medical ethics and without any public health or scientific basis. She and
her friends tried several times to enlist the help of the Health Ministry’s
National AIDS Program, whose mandate includes improving and facilitating
care for people living with HIV and AIDS, which failed to adequately respond
to the urgency of the case in a timely fashion. As her clinical condition
continued to deteriorate, Samia was forced to resort to a private doctor who
performed the surgery on 21 December 2006. She did not disclose her HIV
status to the surgeon until immediately before the surgery. She feared that
if she had done so earlier she would have been rejected again.
Samia’s story
and ordeal are not unique, and the EIPR is greatly concerned that the
Egyptian government is not providing people living with HIV and AIDS like
Samia with sufficient medical attention and care. Egypt is obliged under
national and international law to provide healthcare to all those living
under its jurisdiction, including those living with HIV and AIDS. The
reality, however, is that people living with HIV and AIDS in Egypt are
subject to serious violations of that right.
“Worldwide
experiences assert that care for people living with HIV and AIDS is an
essential component of an adequate and effective response to the epidemic,”
Dr. Elgerzawy added. “An investigation into Samia’s death is needed not just
to establish the truth for her family, but also to reveal and remedy the
serious flaws in the government’s system of care for people living with HIV
and AIDS.