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TRANSITIONS ONLINE: Romania: Legacy of Shame
by
<http://www.tol.cz/look/TOL/printf.tpl?IdLanguage=1&IdPublication=4&NrIssue=
225&NrSection=3&NrArticle=18814&ST1=ad&ST_T1=job&ST_AS1=1&ST2=body&ST_T2=let
ter&ST_AS2=1&ST3=text&ST_T3=aatol&ST_AS3=1&ST_max=3#author> Claudia Lauer
3 July 2007

Health workers say too little is done to help the Romani community cope with
an HIV infection rate that may be far higher than statistics suggest. 

BUCHAREST, Romania | A small van edges onto a deserted street in northeast
Bucharest. On the side of the vehicle, a glossy red ribbon - the
international symbol of the struggle against AIDS - is almost unnoticeable
in the darkness.

Here in this working-class neighborhood on the outskirts of town, no strings
of blue lights hang from lampposts to celebrate Romania's entry into the
European Union like those you see in the downtown and shopping districts of
the city.

In the front seat, Adrian Caraboi sighs and pushes his hand through his
spiky blond hair. He normally moves at a breakneck pace, speeding around the
city in this converted ambulance. Suddenly, he shifts to just above slow
motion. If he's going to have any success tonight, he must be patient. He
takes another deep breath before jumping out.

Inside the van, there is a mobile HIV unit with three chairs, a large box of
condoms, pamphlets, films and videos about prevention and a stack of rapid
HIV antibody tests. Caraboi opens the back doors and a flood of light spills
onto the street.

Faces start to peek out from cracks in the row of dilapidated buildings -
the remnants of former dictator Nicolae Ceausescu's housing policies that
moved people from small family homes into flats. Some people call Adrian
over to give him a high-five before they step out into the light.

Others are more confrontational. An older man yells with accusation and
surprise, "You came back again, gadjo!" Caraboi just smiles and shakes the
man's hand. Gadjo is the word for outsider in the Romani language.

The few dozen people who make their way to the van four nights a week are
some of the 5,000 Roma whom Caraboi visits each month. As part of his job as
a project coordinator for the Romanian Association Against AIDS, or ARAS,
Caraboi tries to convince Roma at risk for HIV to take antibody tests. It
can take months or even years to persuade them because, as an outsider, he
first has to earn the community's trust. Since 2004, ARAS, which has eight
offices in the country, has tested 2,074 Roma out of a national population
estimated at up to 2 million.

None of the health workers who deal with HIV in Romani communities knows how
many Roma are infected with the virus, but they believe the numbers are much
higher than the government health agencies or the Roma themselves will
admit. Many Romani children lived in orphanages or received medical care in
the late 1980s and early '90s, when as many as 11,000 children were
accidentally infected with HIV at state institutions during the tail end of
Ceausescu's reign.

The government started an official program offering free antiretroviral
treatments for HIV in 2002, but few Roma have come forward to receive state
aid. Discrimination, mistrust of state institutions, and reservations among
many Roma to learn about and be tested for HIV could result in another
generation of HIV-positive children.

The Health Ministry reports that there are only five cases of Roma with HIV
or AIDS in the entire country, where the United Nations has recorded a
cumulative 14,000 cases of HIV or AIDS. However, volunteer health workers on
the ground say that close to 10 percent of the HIV patients they help are
Roma.

At that rate, there may have been as many as 1,000 Roma who were infected in
the original group of children, many of whom could have transmitted the
disease without knowing it, and a large number of whom might have died
without ever receiving treatment. Many Roma families still live in a climate
of secrecy and mistrust making it hard to identify those infected.

It has largely been up to a small army of non-governmental associations to
identify those Roma living with the virus and teach prevention methods. This
is the complicated situation that Caraboi and other health workers are
facing in their fight to have HIV recognized as even a potential problem
among the country's Roma. It's a task that often requires more time and
attention because of cultural traditions including adolescent marriage, home
birthing, and a mistrust of birth control.

"The biggest problem," Caraboi says, "is getting [Roma] to stop thinking,
'No, no, no, I don't need the test. AIDS is not for me, not for us, it isn't
here.' "

Medical misconceptions are difficult to overcome. Until recently condom use
was rare among the Roma. "The worst thing anyone said is that I want them to
take the condoms as a trick because I want them to have less babies and then
there will be less Roma," Caraboi says. Some of the free condoms he
convinces people to take are sold outside of the community for pocket money,
he says.

RECIPE FOR DISASTER

In a community as historically insular as the Roma, it is difficult to trace
how a virus like HIV could be introduced. In 1990, when the accidental HIV
infections first began to be reported, the groundwork had been laid under
the Ceausescu regime. One of his first orders of business, after taking
office in 1967, was increasing the population and workforce by outlawing
family planning and abortions.

Then, over the course of two decades, Ceausescu drove the country into debt
by building elaborate palaces and construction projects to "modernize"
Romania. In the early 1980s he began imposing food and energy rations, he
cut the budgets at social institutions, and began exporting fuel, food,
timber, and anything else he could sell to reduce the national deficit.

The results were a high level of poverty and an increase in unwanted
children. Romani families, which were already traditionally large, also
increased in size at this time because even though birth control had never
been widely accepted, abortions were common among the Roma. Children of all
ethnicities were now being dropped off at railway stations and churches,
causing the population in orphanages to swell to an unmanageable number.

State institutions were forced to deal with slashed budgets. Hospitals
resorted to reusing needles and other materials that could be rinsed or
quickly sterilized. Blood, however, was in large supply because donors were
paid a small fee. So, when the orphanage pantries were down to just powdered
milk, it seemed like a good idea to give the smallest and weakest children
whole blood transfusions under the theory that new blood would have more
nutrients for their bodies to use.

It was the catalyst for a health crisis.

In 1988, only 20 percent of the blood being donated was tested for disease.
For that year, the Romanian government reported three cases of HIV infection
to the World Health Organization. For the next year, the number swelled to
nearly 1,200. Nearly 96 percent of those cases were children under 4 years
old, 65 percent of the children lived in orphanages, and all of them had a
history of multiple transfusions. The children's epidemic was born.

After the 1989 revolution, the worst orphanages were closed. Several
administrators who were interviewed by non-governmental organizations at
that time said that up to 80 percent of the children in their care were
Roma. But, because of a lack of record keeping, getting an accurate estimate
of the number of Roma children in orphanages in the 1980s is nearly
impossible. However, anecdotal evidence of a high number of Roma children in
orphanages would suggest that the current government significantly
underestimates the number of cases of HIV infection among Roma.

The Black Seas coastal city of Constanta is ground zero for Romania's HIV
epidemic, the place where the first cases were found and the place where the
most Roma cases of HIV have been reported to NGOs. 

COURAGEOUS HEALTH WORKER

In the living room of an AIDS hospice for 10 teenagers in Mihail
Kogalniceanu, about 30 minutes north of Constanta, Dr. Rodica Matusa places
a plate of fried and sugared dough on the table. Her grandmotherly smile,
tiny glasses and round red cheeks are deceptive.

This is the face of a medical revolution in Romania. She was the first
doctor to diagnose HIV in the children who had transfusions, and the first
to come forward with her findings. Matusa pulls her purple shawl tight
around her shoulders. It's hard to picture her as a rebel, but at a time
when police informers lurked everywhere, going against the government's
wishes was deemed revolutionary defiance.

When young children started to get sick in 1988 and 1989, they were all sent
to Matusa. Over a period of five days, nearly 200 children piled into
Constanta Hospital. They were in the advanced stages of AIDS. Without
treatment, the average life expectancy for an infant infected with HIV is
about three years. As the age of infection rises, so does the life
expectancy as long as the child receives proper nutrition and isn't exposed
to illness.

These children who had been infected on average for less than three years
were dying at the rate of 10 per day. There was no day clinic at the time to
house all of them, no beds, no food because of budget cuts, no medicine
because it had never been a problem before.

When Matusa informed the Health Ministry that children had died of AIDS
complications, she recalls, she was threatened and told to change the cause
of death to pneumonia or diarrhea. The Health Ministry felt the number of
AIDS cases Matusa was talking about would have made Romania look bad.

The Securitate, Ceausescu's secret police, began keeping files on Matusa,
she says. HIV workers all over the country recount her stories almost like
legends. All of them finish by describing how Matusa kept her own secret
files of all the children with AIDS symptoms, hidden in a false compartment
in her desk. She listed the cause of death as "SIDA" in red ink, she
recalls, using the Romanian acronym for AIDS.

"I still have them in my office. They were under lock and key, but I have
files for everyone so that we could track the disease," she says. "The worst
part was telling their parents. We would just quickly say it because there
was nothing else we could tell them."

Because blood wasn't being tested and transfusions were common in regular
hospitals as well. "Anyone who went to the hospital with a small child was
susceptible," Matusa says.

"This is not a disease of the Roma," she says, pronouncing each word
carefully for emphasis. "Of course there are a few cases, but they are not
the majority. We do not want people to think AIDS is a Roma disease."

The discrimination against HIV-positive people in Romania was profound. All
of the children in the hospice were abandoned by their parents, who became
frightened when they found out their sons and daughters were infected.

Matusa says the situation is starting to improve, at least for infected
teens. The Health Ministry has started several public information campaigns
to help spread public awareness, but many of the infected teens continue to
keep their medical history a secret. Matusa is worried that the historic
discrimination against the Roma will stunt the progress NGOs have had in
gaining funding for programs and fighting public HIV discrimination. 

PREJUDICE PERSISTS

While many Romanians still harbor prejudice against the Roma, those infected
with the AIDS virus have an even harder time. HIV-positive Roma have to hide
the fact that they were even tested for fear of being ostracized. A Romani
teen in a small village 40 miles from Constanta said that if her village
knew she was HIV positive, they would ask her and her family to stop using
the community water well, reflecting widespread ignorance about how the
virus can be spread.

The number of patients hiding their real identities in Constanta started to
make an impression on Crina Gutui, an HIV/AIDS worker who is Romani. Gutui
would record people's addresses on medical paperwork - addresses that were
inside of Roma enclaves - but when she would write "Roma" under the space
for ethnicity, people would correct her. "They would claim to be Turkish or
Muslim, but I know their names, they are Roma last names," she says.

Gutui says she believes that is one reason why the official number of Roma
with HIV is so low. Over time, a large number of Roma started identifying
themselves as something else whenever they could. 

However, Gutui says more importantly many Roma are unwilling to come
forward. "They have more problems in the Roma community with HIV, but they
hide it. It's shame about sexual disease. Even children infected don't know
it's HIV, because their parents are ashamed they passed this disease to
their children," she says. "I see so many people who just don't care enough.
You really have to scare them, to tell them that this disease will make them
die."

Gutui left ARAS after two years with the program to go back to the community
where she was born in rural Braila County, in southeastern Romania. Working
there is an uphill battle, she says.

"To get them tested, maybe it is one or two years, but you have to work for
10 years here before you will change the way of thinking," Gutui says.

TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES

Back in Bucharest, Colentina Hospital is enormous, with more than a dozen
wards and specialty units housed in a drab building. The hospital is guarded
by armed security in the traditional navy blue jumpsuits and black berets of
the government police services.

At the entrance on the east side of the hospital, a line of people stretches
halfway down the block. Almost everyone in line is young. No one is laughing
or talking, except to guess aloud when the iron gates will close. The
remaining people will then be sent home. They are all dressed in layers of
dark clothing with hoods, hats and scarves covering their hair and most of
their faces to hide their identity.

Dr. Mariana Madarescu hurries through one of the hospital's winding white
stairwells, her arms crossed. As the head of Romania's pediatric AIDS
program, she is in charge of keeping all of the country's HIV statistics.
She rattles off statistics at the beginning of a tour of the hospital's
HIV/AIDS ward. There are 6,700 patients receiving treatment. Nearly 11,000
people have been infected, and the rest are being monitored until treatment
with antiretroviral drugs becomes necessary.

Then she says, "There are five," referring to the number of Roma infected.
"It is not discrimination when there are only five cases of Roma diagnosed
with HIV." 

The rooms are small and cramped with three beds and some dresser drawers in
each. She hurries through introductions to some of the interim patients,
starting with a three-day-old baby abandoned by her HIV-positive mother, who
apparently was a prostitute. Health workers think the baby may be Romani.
Madarescu says HIV tests show the baby is "100 percent" negative.

She waves hello to a 16-year-old mother, a runaway, who is one of the few
people the doctor will admit might have gotten HIV through sexual
intercourse. There are children with advanced AIDS who cannot leave their
beds. They stare at the floor or the ceiling, alone in their rooms.

"Abandoned," Madarescu says. They are all small for their age, 16 or 17, too
skinny and fragile looking, as though their necks are having a hard time
just supporting their heads. No one comes to visit them and for the ones who
are in the last stage of the disease, no one will watch as their caskets
leave the hospital.

The government started providing antiretroviral treatment to children in
1995, but the drugs were not widely available until a national AIDS action
plan began in 2002. It did not include any specifics about how the drug
program would continue to be funded, so until recently, foreign aid was the
only way the program could keep going. It also did not include any programs
to specifically address the Romani population.

"It is not a problem in the Roma community, and none of our programs are
aimed at them specifically," says Dr. Adrian Streinu, head of the infectious
disease unit at Colentina Hospital. "Our first priority was treating HIV,
and making treatment available to everyone." 

But critics say some Roma can't get treatment if they suspect infection or
already are infected with the virus that can lead to AIDS. And there is
another problem: access to medical care. Getting health coverage in Romania
requires proof of citizenship, usually a birth certificate. This is not
easily done for many Roma. In rural communities, Romani mothers have their
babies at home and parents tend to not get birth certificates. Filling out
paperwork for health insurance also can be an involved process. ARAS workers
offer to accompany families to help them apply, Caraboi says.

"Doctors will refuse to see Roma if they do not have identification paper or
insurance card," he says. When Roma test positive for HIV or other
sexually-transmitted diseases, a representative of ARAS will accompany them
to get treatments the first few times, in order to make sure they know where
to go and what to do.

"Sometimes it doesn't matter, sometimes it is just discrimination. Some
doctors will say they are unclean, or smell and refuse to treat them for
those reasons," Caraboi says. "I have a special deal with a doctor I found.
I pay him some money at the beginning of the year, and when I bring in Roma,
he doesn't ask for ID cards. I mean, this is the way most of Romania works.
Everyone pays a little extra to make sure doctors take good care of them."

GOVERNMENT DEFENDS POLICIES

Vlad Iliescu, an official in the Health Ministry, defends the government's
health policies as open to all Romanians.

"When you talk about HIV, there is no special access for a certain category
of people. Anyone is eligible for the free ARV [antiretroviral] treatments
or any of the programs we offer. We don't tailor them for any particular
group," he says. "We do have programs that address Romani healthcare needs.
Out of roughly 8,900 community nurses there are 300 dedicated solely to the
Romani communities." 

But voluntary associations and non-governmental organizations remain at the
vanguard of helping the Romani community. A priest in Craiova, two hours
west of Bucharest, talks to Romani teens about condoms, abstinence, and the
effects of HIV. A doctor at Colentina Hospital makes sure to set aside a box
of pamphlets that detail how new mothers can transmit HIV to their children
through natural birth and breastfeeding. It will go to social services
programs that work with the Romani community.

There are missions and churches that focus solely on taking Romani teen
prostitutes off the street and getting them into group homes or schools. One
group donates crates of condoms to ARAS.

Caraboi returns to the ARAS office. Tonight he is going to a new
neighborhood, a little farther away. He stacks two boxes of condoms, counts
out 100 HIV tests, and makes sure to bring extra paper pamphlets to hand
out.

He takes a deep breath and prepares to begin again.

"I will get them to take the tests, and in one year," Caraboi says opening
the van doors, "when I return to test them a second time and they still
don't have [HIV] then I am successful. Then I will be happy."

Claudia Lauer wrote this report as part of her graduate studies in
journalism at the University of California, Berkeley.

Copyright C 2007 Transitions Online

----------------------------
 
Vali
"Noble blood is an accident of fortune; noble actions are the chief mark of
greatness." (Carlo Goldoni)

"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know
peace." (Jimi Hendrix)

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