Tuesday, June 11, 2024 -A 50-year-old South African man identified as Solomon Mthana has revealed that he suffered mental and emotional trauma after being misdiagnosed with HIV and then placed on ARVs.
According to
him, being told later that he's negative has been an emotional and
psychological roller-coaster ride for him and his family.
It was gathered that his ordeal began after
visiting Settlers Hospital in
Makhanda in March to have a lump in his head removed through surgery. Doctors
took blood samples for testing at the laboratory to understand the underlying
causes of the lump.
They also insisted on doing a rapid
response HIV Test which gives instant results. The Test found Mthana was
HIV-positive, which led to him getting counselling before he was put on ARV
treatment.
The private security guard told Sowetan
that the drugs took a toll on his body and that he suffered mental and
emotional trauma because of the misdiagnosis. He said;
“I was struggling to get used to the drugs.
The first two weeks were the worst. I was vomiting constantly, had nausea and
my body was often abnormally tired.”
However, negative blood Test results from
the lab only came back in April after Mthana had been taking the treatment for
over a month and learning to live with a non-existing virus in his body.
He said he suspected something was off the day the doctors broke the news
to him. Nurses, he said, were unusually too nice to him. He further
revealed that they offered him counselling on the spot.
Mthana
said;
“Around four nurses received me when I
arrived at the facility and were too polite. I have never seen them like that.
They even offered me tea. There was also a therapist. By that time, I knew
there was something suspicious. Then the doctor came and broke this news.
“I had disclosed to my partner and some of
the members of my family about my HIV-positive status which I was then told
later it never existed. It’s been an emotional and psychological roller-coaster
ride for me and my family. We have been taken to hell and back.”
The Eastern Cape health department has blamed the rapid response Test kit for
the false results and also apologised to Mthana. Department spokesperson
Mkhululi Ndamase said the Test kits which give immediate results are not 100%
accurate.
He said;
“It is important to note that HIV test kits
have a 99% accuracy rate, meaning there is a possibility of false positive
cases. The Test was done in line with protocol.
“We can confirm that the patient is known
to Settlers Hospital. The patient was called, and redress was done and accepted
after the clinical processes taken were explained to him.”
Ndamase said that no one was to blame for the incident and that there won’t be
any consequential action taken against anyone at the hospital.
While Mthana is worried that taking and
stopping the drugs may lead to long-term effects, former president and CEO of
the SA Medical Research Council, Prof Glenda Gray, said he need not worry.
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