2006年VOA标准英语-Congo Hospital Keeps Dying AIDS Patients Unawar(在线收听) |
By Nico Colombant A hospital in the Democratic Republic of Congo has a death row aisle for female victims of HIV/AIDS, but most do not even know they are close to death, or even that they are infected. The deadly disease remains a taboo in the war-torn country, even in the capital. ----- This hospital built by Belgium colonizers in 1928 is the biggest in the DRC. It now has an aisle for female victims of HIV/AIDS. Most are very sick, but they do not even know they suffer from the disease. Doctors say AIDS is considered so shameful, that victims refuse to even consider the possibility of a test. She says it is important for her to know her status. "My only surviving son is only nine years old. He needs to study. He needs to live. So I am under intensive treatment. But still it does not seem to be going too well for me. I had to go to other hospitals before ending up here. Now I am treated better, but I still cannot stop vomiting and having diarrhea. I have lost 30 kilograms. I try to eat well but it is so difficult." Doctor Bwanahali says it very difficult to treat HIV/AIDS in Africa, because many victims are so poor, and have so very little to eat. Those who refuse to be tested, he says, endure an uncertain future, in near-total isolation. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/11/35686.html |