The Fort Worth Press - Ivory Coast leprosy sufferers fight social exclusion

USD -
AED 3.672503
AFN 66.000343
ALL 81.750787
AMD 378.260319
ANG 1.79008
AOA 917.000119
ARS 1447.7807
AUD 1.429327
AWG 1.80125
AZN 1.695576
BAM 1.65515
BBD 2.013067
BDT 122.134821
BGN 1.67937
BHD 0.37701
BIF 2960
BMD 1
BND 1.271532
BOB 6.906503
BRL 5.2395
BSD 0.999467
BTN 90.452257
BWP 13.162215
BYN 2.854157
BYR 19600
BZD 2.010138
CAD 1.366615
CDF 2225.000441
CHF 0.777305
CLF 0.021735
CLP 858.210238
CNY 6.938199
CNH 6.93926
COP 3628.58
CRC 495.478914
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 93.31088
CZK 20.654396
DJF 177.720153
DKK 6.328325
DOP 62.700992
DZD 129.716681
EGP 46.898171
ERN 15
ETB 154.846992
EUR 0.84738
FJD 2.20515
FKP 0.729917
GBP 0.73281
GEL 2.695017
GGP 0.729917
GHS 10.974578
GIP 0.729917
GMD 72.999681
GNF 8771.298855
GTQ 7.666172
GYD 209.107681
HKD 7.812425
HNL 26.40652
HRK 6.385502
HTG 131.004367
HUF 321.707506
IDR 16807
ILS 3.094805
IMP 0.729917
INR 90.44185
IQD 1309.366643
IRR 42125.000158
ISK 122.698337
JEP 0.729917
JMD 156.730659
JOD 0.709031
JPY 156.945499
KES 128.949615
KGS 87.449748
KHR 4034.223621
KMF 418.00016
KPW 899.945137
KRW 1461.704465
KWD 0.30733
KYD 0.83291
KZT 496.518171
LAK 21498.933685
LBP 89504.332961
LKR 309.337937
LRD 185.901857
LSL 15.973208
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.604889
LYD 6.316351
MAD 9.162679
MDL 16.911242
MGA 4427.744491
MKD 52.212764
MMK 2099.936125
MNT 3569.846682
MOP 8.043143
MRU 39.687396
MUR 45.879676
MVR 15.450132
MWK 1732.791809
MXN 17.32615
MYR 3.935502
MZN 63.749926
NAD 15.973816
NGN 1368.559885
NIO 36.779547
NOK 9.67647
NPR 144.74967
NZD 1.666655
OMR 0.384458
PAB 0.999458
PEN 3.359892
PGK 4.282021
PHP 58.951022
PKR 279.546749
PLN 3.57428
PYG 6615.13009
QAR 3.645472
RON 4.317499
RSD 99.475027
RUB 76.246155
RWF 1458.735317
SAR 3.75002
SBD 8.058101
SCR 13.714455
SDG 601.498038
SEK 8.989675
SGD 1.27291
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.474968
SLL 20969.499267
SOS 570.224434
SRD 37.894053
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.734071
SVC 8.745065
SYP 11059.574895
SZL 15.972716
THB 31.719961
TJS 9.340239
TMT 3.51
TND 2.890703
TOP 2.40776
TRY 43.529499
TTD 6.770395
TWD 31.672103
TZS 2580.289652
UAH 43.116413
UGX 3558.598395
UYU 38.520938
UZS 12251.99609
VES 371.640565
VND 25982
VUV 119.556789
WST 2.72617
XAF 555.124234
XAG 0.011178
XAU 0.0002
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.80131
XDR 0.68948
XOF 555.135979
XPF 100.927097
YER 238.374961
ZAR 16.080355
ZMK 9001.194249
ZMW 19.565181
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.87

    -0.29%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3200

    16.68

    -1.92%

  • CMSC

    -0.1400

    23.52

    -0.6%

  • BTI

    -0.2400

    61.63

    -0.39%

  • NGG

    1.5600

    87.79

    +1.78%

  • RIO

    0.1100

    96.48

    +0.11%

  • AZN

    3.1300

    187.45

    +1.67%

  • GSK

    3.8900

    57.23

    +6.8%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    26.34

    +0.91%

  • RELX

    -0.7300

    29.78

    -2.45%

  • BCC

    5.3000

    90.23

    +5.87%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    13.15

    +0.23%

  • VOD

    0.4600

    15.71

    +2.93%

  • BP

    0.3800

    39.2

    +0.97%

Ivory Coast leprosy sufferers fight social exclusion
Ivory Coast leprosy sufferers fight social exclusion / Photo: © AFP

Ivory Coast leprosy sufferers fight social exclusion

"A week before my mother died, her house was broken into and burned down," said Mathieu Okoma Agoa, from a village in Ivory Coast.

Text size:

"After her funeral, women danced in the village because, according to them, the evil was gone," he said.

Okoma Agoa's mother suffered from leprosy, a disease that made her a social outcast long before she died. And the experience left its mark on him, too. "I am scarred for life," he said.

He is not the only one.

Camille Kouassi Assi, the village chief, told how his parents were also ostracised because of their leprosy, right up until the end of their lives. Recalling their ordeal, his voice trembled, his eyes welling up with tears.

Both men spoke to AFP in the run-up to World Leprosy Day on Sunday. They live in the southern Ivorian village of Duquesne-Cremone, which since the 1960s has been a refuge for leprosy patients and their relatives fleeing social exclusion.

Around 100 kilometres (60 miles) from the economic hub Abidjan, Duquesne-Cremone is named after a French priest and the Italian city whose inhabitants financed its creation.

- 'We feel at home here' -

At first glance it is like any other Ivorian village. But this community of 2,800 inhabitants, isolated at the end of a long track that cuts through an immense forest, is sheltered from the gaze of outsiders.

And it still has 54 patients.

"We feel at home here," Kouassi Assi, a father of four and mathematics teacher, told AFP in the small courtyard of his home.

Further along the same road, Gisele Abena, 29, was being treated at the Raoul Follereau Institute, a hospital belonging to a French group of the same name.

The medical centre has been fighting leprosy and Buruli ulcer, a skin infection, for almost a century.

Abena emerges from one of the pastel-coloured buildings grouped together on 42 hectares, whose open windows let in the tropical heat.

She is in a wheelchair, as leprosy has eaten away at her feet.

"I feel good here," said the mother of two. "There are a lot of us and I have made friends."

Originally from Bondoukou in the northeast, she has no desire to return there and experience again the stigma local people imposed upon her.

- Widespread ignorance -

"The leprosy microbe socially excludes patients," said Professor Bamba Vagamon, director general of the Raoul Follereau Institute.

"It distorts the face, distinctive features. The patient no longer recognises himself, nor do those who know him," he explained.

"It is as if he no longer really exists. I find this all the more horrible since the patient retains all his mental faculties," he said.

"Between 70 and 80 percent of patients have a depressive symptom," he added.

Ivory Coast has 12 of the 20 neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) listed by the World Health Organization (WHO), including leprosy.

In 2022, 514 new cases were recorded in the country, but because antibiotic-based treatments are long and recovery difficult to establish, it is it is hard to say exactly how many patients there are.

If life in Duquesne-Cremone is a welcome haven from what the patients have experienced elsewhere, the staff nevertheless want them, eventually, to return to their families -- even if they are often reluctant to have them back because they are so poorly informed about the disease.

"Until 2015, even medical universities in Ivory Coast did not offer education on leprosy," explained Vagamon. He only managed to change that eight years ago.

- Long incubation -

Leprosy is transmitted through prolonged contact. The microbe multiplies very slowly, making the incubation period up to five years. The first symptoms cause spots to appear, then gradually eat away at desensitised limbs.

"There is no test that can detect a case of leprosy before the appearance of physical symptoms," added Vagamon.

His institute will soon become a research centre specialising in NTDs, with a view to developing a means of screening.

Vagamon is confident the "zero leprosy by 2030" objective set by the Ivorian health ministry in 2022 is achievable, in particular thanks to raising awareness among children in schools.

Representing 10 percent of leprosy cases, children in rural areas are regularly affected by various skin diseases.

"They often come to class tired and have trouble concentrating because they scratch a lot," explained Pierre Bazie, deputy headmaster in the village school in Djougbosso.

They are being targeted by state-organised screenings financed by the Raoul Follereau Institute, so they understand the dangers of the disease.

M.Delgado--TFWP