Primary counsellors trained in sign language

16 Sep, 2018 - 00:09 0 Views

The Sunday Mail

Tadiwa Nyatanga-Pfupa
NAC Communications Officer
In its quest to end AIDS by 2030 without leaving anyone behind, the National Aids Council (NAC) and the Ministry of Health and Child Care (MoHCC) held the first ever Sign Language and Special Needs training programme for primary counsellors in HIV and Aids.

This follows the realisation that there is an information gap in information dissemination to and amongst those with hearing impairments.

The workshop, held in Bindura, saw 30 participants from Mashonaland Central, Mashonaland West, Mashonaland East, Harare, Manicaland and Masvingo provinces being trained in: categories of deafness, defining terms in sign language, health words, appropriate and inappropriate interaction with clients who cannot hear as well as sign language sentence structure and simple gestures used by those with hearing impairments, among other topics.

At the programme, MoHCC’s National HIV and Testing Services Training Officer, Mrs Beatrice Dupwa, said counselors find it difficult to serve clients who cannot hear as they cannot understand each other.

“You find that the counselor does not understand what the person with hearing and speech challenges is trying to put across and the counselor cannot give out any information to that client, resulting in those with hearing impairments going without critical information that could save their lives,” she said.

NAC’s Care, Treatment and Support Co-ordinator, Mrs Caroline Sirewu concurred with Mrs Dupwa.

“Our major aim is that we eliminate the occurrence of new HIV infections. We cannot achieve this if people with hearing and speech problems continue to lag behind in terms of HIV and Aids information.

“We need to give them information on prevention of HIV and if they are HIV positive we equip them with information on how to take their medicines and what foods to take among other things,” said Mrs Sirewu.

She added that it will be most ideal to train more primary counselors but at the moment the funding is not adequate.

Some of the primary counselors that were trained in sign language

Visuals used to teach ways of HIV Transmission to young people with hearing impairments

One of the participants, Mrs Melody Manwa from Morgenster Mission in Masvingo narrated the difficulties they encounter as counselors when they are approached by clients who cannot hear and or talk.

She spoke of one case where the client was suicidal after receiving his HIV results and there was nobody who could communicate with him to give him hope.

The institution ended up looking for a member of the community who lived in a home where there was someone with a hearing impairment to assist with the sign language.

“This is a difficult decision that we found ourselves taking because once we involve someone else who is not a counselor, confidentiality is compromised,” Mrs Manwa said.

She hailed NAC and the MoHCC for the initiative, which she believes will benefit both counselors and clients.

A trainer from Sunrise Sign Language Academy, who can neither hear nor speak, Chiedza Hukuimwe, said that she is happy to be training counselors in sign language and will be happy to have other institutions such as banks training sign language to tellers.

“As young people we learnt that when you are in a relationship and are about to get married, you should go for counseling and testing but once we get there, the counselors cannot address us.

“We also visit banks, we also go to church but we do not get the help we need because of communication challenges. I hope that we will actually have people like me training as primary counselors too,” said Chiedza.

NAC has been working with several institutions that assist people living with disabilities, in the response to HIV.

Ms Medelina Dube, the Communications Director for NAC, emphasised the need for information dissemination amongst those living with disabilities.

“We are looking at a group that is at greater risk of HIV because they are human, they fall in love and like everyone else, they end up engaging in sex, amongst themselves and with people without disabilities.

“This is a group that faces double stigma if they contract HIV: the stigma of being disabled and the stigma of being HIV positive hence they need to be able to express themselves to anyone who they feel can help them and this person can be someone who is not deaf. We, therefore, need to train as many people as possible in sign language,” she said.

Ms Dube added that people with hearing challenges also understand things differently from the rest of the population hence the need for standardised sign language and intensive training of counselors and all health personnel in sign language.

A case that indicates that deaf people understand issues differently is that of Dumiso Kurewa of Mutare who attends HIV and Aids lessons at Nzeve Deaf Children’s Centre.

He said that due to the various signs used by different people to communicate, the issue of HIV treatment was so confusing that he ended up thinking that if the HIV virus is suppressed with Anti-Retroviral Treatment (ART), one can get the virus removed from their feet.

He also used to think that if one is HIV positive and stops taking drugs, the virus would go up to their head and affect the brains.

The major challenge regarding sign language is that it is so dynamic and diverse in different communities that deaf people end up getting the wrong information from different interpreters in different places.

Share This: