In the midst of a 'perfect storm': Unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma for children orphaned by Ebola in Sierra Leone

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

In the midst of a 'perfect storm': Unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma for children orphaned by Ebola in Sierra Leone. / Denis-Ramirez, Elise; Holmegaard Sørensen, Katrine ; Skovdal, Morten.

In: Children and Youth Services Review, Vol. 73, 02.2017, p. 445–453.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Denis-Ramirez, E, Holmegaard Sørensen, K & Skovdal, M 2017, 'In the midst of a 'perfect storm': Unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma for children orphaned by Ebola in Sierra Leone', Children and Youth Services Review, vol. 73, pp. 445–453. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2016.11.025

APA

Denis-Ramirez, E., Holmegaard Sørensen, K., & Skovdal, M. (2017). In the midst of a 'perfect storm': Unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma for children orphaned by Ebola in Sierra Leone. Children and Youth Services Review, 73, 445–453. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2016.11.025

Vancouver

Denis-Ramirez E, Holmegaard Sørensen K, Skovdal M. In the midst of a 'perfect storm': Unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma for children orphaned by Ebola in Sierra Leone. Children and Youth Services Review. 2017 Feb;73:445–453. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2016.11.025

Author

Denis-Ramirez, Elise ; Holmegaard Sørensen, Katrine ; Skovdal, Morten. / In the midst of a 'perfect storm': Unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma for children orphaned by Ebola in Sierra Leone. In: Children and Youth Services Review. 2017 ; Vol. 73. pp. 445–453.

Bibtex

@article{1bb6d0d1db4d43b7aa911101245618cd,
title = "In the midst of a 'perfect storm': Unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma for children orphaned by Ebola in Sierra Leone",
abstract = "The West African Ebola virus epidemic resulted in the deaths of more than 11,000 people and caused significant social disruption. Little is known about how the world's worst Ebola outbreak has affected the thousands of children left orphaned as their parents or caregivers succumbed to the virus. Given the infectious nature of Ebola, and numerous anecdotal accounts of stigmatisation, we set out to examine children's social representations of peers orphaned by Ebola, unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma. The study was conducted in 2015 in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Data was generated through drawings and captions from 24 children living in four different communities in Freetown and interviews with four key informants. The children were first invited to draw a child whose family has been affected by Ebola and subsequently asked to write 3–10 phrases explaining the drawing. The drawings and captions were thematically condensed and key thematic areas were identified. The thematic areas emerging from the drawings were subsequently used to frame the interviews with practitioners. Unsurprisingly, Ebola was represented as a highly stigmatized and feared disease. Children drew and wrote vividly about health campaigns initiated to contain the epidemic, such as the {\textquoteleft}no touch{\textquoteright} policy and quarantine of suspected Ebola cases. Although important, the health campaigns appeared to cement an {\textquoteleft}othering{\textquoteright} of anyone associated with Ebola. Children orphaned by Ebola were depicted as excluded from social interaction due to the association with Ebola. This prevailing fear and stigma of Ebola were described to undermine the willingness of community members to help orphaned children and described to have severe psychological repercussions for children orphaned by Ebola. Many of our findings resonate strongly with the experiences of children orphaned by AIDS, calling for a greater focus on the risk of Ebola-related stigma and further discussion on the transferability and applicability of lessons learned from research on HIV-related stigma.",
author = "Elise Denis-Ramirez and {Holmegaard S{\o}rensen}, Katrine and Morten Skovdal",
year = "2017",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1016/j.childyouth.2016.11.025",
language = "English",
volume = "73",
pages = "445–453",
journal = "Children and Youth Services Review",
issn = "0190-7409",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - In the midst of a 'perfect storm': Unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma for children orphaned by Ebola in Sierra Leone

AU - Denis-Ramirez, Elise

AU - Holmegaard Sørensen, Katrine

AU - Skovdal, Morten

PY - 2017/2

Y1 - 2017/2

N2 - The West African Ebola virus epidemic resulted in the deaths of more than 11,000 people and caused significant social disruption. Little is known about how the world's worst Ebola outbreak has affected the thousands of children left orphaned as their parents or caregivers succumbed to the virus. Given the infectious nature of Ebola, and numerous anecdotal accounts of stigmatisation, we set out to examine children's social representations of peers orphaned by Ebola, unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma. The study was conducted in 2015 in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Data was generated through drawings and captions from 24 children living in four different communities in Freetown and interviews with four key informants. The children were first invited to draw a child whose family has been affected by Ebola and subsequently asked to write 3–10 phrases explaining the drawing. The drawings and captions were thematically condensed and key thematic areas were identified. The thematic areas emerging from the drawings were subsequently used to frame the interviews with practitioners. Unsurprisingly, Ebola was represented as a highly stigmatized and feared disease. Children drew and wrote vividly about health campaigns initiated to contain the epidemic, such as the ‘no touch’ policy and quarantine of suspected Ebola cases. Although important, the health campaigns appeared to cement an ‘othering’ of anyone associated with Ebola. Children orphaned by Ebola were depicted as excluded from social interaction due to the association with Ebola. This prevailing fear and stigma of Ebola were described to undermine the willingness of community members to help orphaned children and described to have severe psychological repercussions for children orphaned by Ebola. Many of our findings resonate strongly with the experiences of children orphaned by AIDS, calling for a greater focus on the risk of Ebola-related stigma and further discussion on the transferability and applicability of lessons learned from research on HIV-related stigma.

AB - The West African Ebola virus epidemic resulted in the deaths of more than 11,000 people and caused significant social disruption. Little is known about how the world's worst Ebola outbreak has affected the thousands of children left orphaned as their parents or caregivers succumbed to the virus. Given the infectious nature of Ebola, and numerous anecdotal accounts of stigmatisation, we set out to examine children's social representations of peers orphaned by Ebola, unpacking the causes and consequences of Ebola-related stigma. The study was conducted in 2015 in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Data was generated through drawings and captions from 24 children living in four different communities in Freetown and interviews with four key informants. The children were first invited to draw a child whose family has been affected by Ebola and subsequently asked to write 3–10 phrases explaining the drawing. The drawings and captions were thematically condensed and key thematic areas were identified. The thematic areas emerging from the drawings were subsequently used to frame the interviews with practitioners. Unsurprisingly, Ebola was represented as a highly stigmatized and feared disease. Children drew and wrote vividly about health campaigns initiated to contain the epidemic, such as the ‘no touch’ policy and quarantine of suspected Ebola cases. Although important, the health campaigns appeared to cement an ‘othering’ of anyone associated with Ebola. Children orphaned by Ebola were depicted as excluded from social interaction due to the association with Ebola. This prevailing fear and stigma of Ebola were described to undermine the willingness of community members to help orphaned children and described to have severe psychological repercussions for children orphaned by Ebola. Many of our findings resonate strongly with the experiences of children orphaned by AIDS, calling for a greater focus on the risk of Ebola-related stigma and further discussion on the transferability and applicability of lessons learned from research on HIV-related stigma.

U2 - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2016.11.025

DO - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2016.11.025

M3 - Journal article

VL - 73

SP - 445

EP - 453

JO - Children and Youth Services Review

JF - Children and Youth Services Review

SN - 0190-7409

ER -

ID: 168940261