SOUTHERN AFRICA: Plans to test health workers slammed
JOHANNESBURG, 30 July (PLUSNEWS) - Plans to make HIV testing compulsory for
foreign health workers aiming to work in Britain were "discriminatory" and
insulting to African nurses, nursing unions said on Tuesday.
"We are strongly opposed to mandatory testing because this will exacerbate
the stigma of HIV positive nurses. We are worried about what will happen to
them when they are found to be positive," the president of the Democratic
Nursing Organisation of South Africa (DENOSA), Ephraim Mafalo, told
PlusNews.
"They need nurses but they turn around and introduce such measures. It's
really an insult to us," a member of Zimbabwe's Nursing Association who
asked not be named, told PlusNews.
Britain's Department of Health intends implementing HIV screening tests for
new nursing and health worker recruits, media reports said.
The move is likely to be introduced as soon as approval is granted for the
plans, which have been forwarded to the National Health Service.
With more than 300 specialist nurses leaving South Africa every month, the
country is the second biggest provider of foreign nurses to Britain. But the
migration of health professionals is not particular to South Africa. Over
the last five years there has been an increase in medical personnel leaving
the Southern African region to seek greener pastures in developed countries.
In Zimbabwe, a large number of doctors and nurses are also heading for
Britain every month, according to Zimbabwe's Nursing Association.
"Our nurses want to survive, they need money, and they are not being paid
enough in our country, they have no other choice but to go," the source told
PlusNews.
The exodus of Zimbabwe's health workers has been blamed on the country's
economic and political crisis.
But DENOSA's Mafalo warned that despite poor working conditions in their own
countries, nurses were also being exploited overseas.
"Sometimes they [nurses] find themselves in worse situations in countries
like Saudi Arabia and even Britain. It's a case of the devil you know is
better than the one you don't know," he added.
Mandatory pre-employment testing in South Africa was unlawful and guidelines
by the International Labour Organisation on HIV/AIDS in the workplace
discouraged such discriminatory practices, AIDS Legal Network Training
Coordinator Ncumisa Nongogo told PlusNews.
The potential exclusion of nurses living with HIV/AIDS would violate
principles of non-discrimination and equality, as there was no legal basis
to exclude them from working, Nongogo said.
"We know Southern Africa carries the burden of HIV/AIDS but we need to show
them that people living with AIDS can continue to be productive," she added.
Derek Bodell, the head of Britain's leading AIDS advocacy organisation the
National AIDS Trust, said in a statement: "People living with people living
with HIV are productive citizens who are able and should be given the
opportunity to work. Testing should not infringe on their rights to
employment nor their human rights."
"The UK has a shortage of health workers and there are many well-trained and
experienced professionals from developing countries who help to fill this
gap. It may be detrimental or unhelpful to keep these professionals from
providing such a necessary service to the UK health system," he added.
[ENDS]
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