Fear and Stigma: The Epidemic
within the SARS Outbreak
Bobbie Person,* Francisco Sy,*
Kelly Holton,*† Barbara Govert,* Arthur Liang,* and the NCID/SARS
Community Outreach Team
*Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta,
Georgia, USA; and †Northrop
Grumman Mission Systems,
Atlanta,
Georgia,
USA
Suggested
citation for this article:
Person B, Sy F, Holton K, Govert B, Liang A, NCID/SARS Emergency
Outreach Team. Fear and stigma: the epidemic within the SARS
outbreak. Emerg Infect Dis [serial online] 2004 Feb [date cited].
Available from: URL: http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/EID/vol10no2/03-0750.htm
Because of their
evolving nature and inherent scientific uncertainties, outbreaks of
emerging infectious diseases can be associated with considerable
fear in the general public or in specific communities, especially
when illness and deaths are substantial. Mitigating fear and
discrimination directed toward persons infected with, and affected
by, infectious disease can be important in controlling transmission.
Persons who are feared and stigmatized may delay seeking care and
remain in the community undetected. This article outlines efforts to
rapidly assess, monitor, and address fears associated with the 2003
severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic in the United
States. Although fear, stigmatization, and discrimination were not
widespread in the general public, Asian-American communities were
particularly affected.
Public health strategies that deal
with rapidly evolving disease outbreaks of new and emerging
infectious diseases require a delicate balance between protecting
the public’s health and initiating exclusionary practices and
treatments that can lead to fear and stigmatization of, and
discrimination against, specific populations. The outbreak of severe
acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) illustrates these difficulties.
SARS spontaneously appeared in the southern province of
Guangdong,
People’s Republic of China,
in November 2002 (1,2). By July 2003, the epidemic, had spread to
more than 30 countries with 8,427 cumulative probable cases and 916
deaths and was identified as a global threat to health (1). In the
United States, 418 cases were reported with 74 classified as
probable SARS; no deaths occurred (1). As with many disease
outbreaks, scientific information and data related to the disease
changed almost hourly, as public health scientists and practitioners
responded to the worldwide outbreak, which was coupled with
widespread fear (3,4).
SARS-related Fear,
Stigmatization, and Discrimination
While persons, agencies, and
governments sought to identify modes of transmission, strategies for
disease containment, and treatment for SARS, fear spread unchecked
throughout the global community. Fear of SARS arose from the
underlying anxiety about a disease with an unknown cause and
possible fatal outcome
Stigmatization of potential SARS patients emerged early in the
outbreak, as global media reported dramatic stories from Asia
in print media, television, and the Internet. Headlines from the
English-language press heightened the fear. “Concern is mounting
over the continuing spread of the deadly SARS virus. Some experts
say it could have a similar impact to the 1918 flu epidemic that
killed 50 million—or the current world HIV crisis,” wrote the
British Broadcasting Corporation from London, England (6). “China
has threatened to execute or jail for life anyone who deliberately
spreads the killer SARS virus,” stated the Cable News Network from
Beijing,
China (7).
Studies have shown that during
serious disease outbreaks, when the general public requires
immediate information, a subgroup of the population that is at
potentially greater risk of experiencing fear, stigmatization, and
discrimination will need special attention from public health
professionals (8–10). The recent SARS outbreak was a classic example
of such an outbreak.
Fear is further fueled when
infection control techniques and restrictive practices such as
quarantine and isolation are employed to protect the public’s health
(11,12). While exclusionary practices based upon the best available
scientific evidence may be scientifically and ethically sound for
one population, those same practices may not be sound for all
populations (5,11). During the SARS outbreak, some persons became
fearful or suspicious of all people who looked Asian, regardless of
their nationality or actual risk factors for SARS, and expected them
to be quarantined. Some Americans did not understand that quarantine
and isolation practices appropriate for SARS-affected areas in Asia,
where community transmission was a concern, were practices that were
not appropriate in the United States where the disease was not
community acquired. For example, some persons, who had recently
traveled to areas where SARS was spreading, isolated themselves,
even though they had no symptoms and had not been exposed to someone
with SARS.
Mitigating Fear,
Stigmatization, and Discrimination through Strategic Community
Outreach
Fear of being socially marginalized
and stigmatized as a result of a disease outbreak may cause people
to deny early clinical symptoms and may contribute to their failure
to seek timely medical care (5). Such fear can ultimately increase
stigmatization when cases are identified at a later date (11).
Stigmatization associated with discrimination often has social and
economic ramifications that intensify internalized stigmatization
and feelings of fear (13).
Containing fear, which is integral
to the public health management of a new and emerging disease such
as SARS, is best accomplished by a behavioral strategy that
addresses the needs of a segment of the population at risk of
becoming stigmatized and discriminated against. This strategy works
best as a complement to a larger public health education and
communication campaign. Typically during outbreaks, initial risk
communication is targeted to front-line public health professionals
through vehicles such as the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
Initial communication provides information on case definitions and
laboratory-testing strategies, as well as interim guidelines for
infection control and other critical issues. Communication
strategies for the general public most frequently involve television
sound bites, press conferences with dignitaries and health
officials, and targeted release of information to mass media outlets
such as newspapers and Internet sites (14). Although these risk
communication activities are critical for keeping the general public
informed during an outbreak, they can fail to meet the personal
needs of the affected population and the general public.
Methods
During the first week of April
2003, the National Center for Infectious Diseases (NCID) at the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) formed a 14-member,
multidisciplinary NCID/SARS Community Outreach Team as part of its
emergency response to the global SARS outbreak. While other NCID/CDC
response teams dealt with laboratory investigations, surveillance,
communication, and clinical infection control practices, the
Community Outreach Team worked to implement rapid public health
strategies to document, monitor, and assist in ameliorating specific
problems associated with fear, stigmatization, and discrimination
attributed to the SARS outbreak in the United States.
In creating a rapid public health
intervention to mitigate behaviors and practices associated with
SARS-related fear, the team recognized the need to address the
experiences of persons at greatest risk for experiencing SARS-related
fear, stigma, and discrimination. The team monitored stigmatizing
ideas and behaviors in the general population and the media,
particularly toward Asian Americans, who were disproportionately
reporting fear, stigmatization, and discrimination compared to the
general public. The team began working with Asian-American
communities to develop a culturally tailored intervention that 1)
promoted community understanding of the facts related to the
transmission and prevention of SARS; 2) contributed to the
strengthening of community resiliency and capacity to mitigate fear,
stigmatization, and discrimination; and 3) encouraged appropriate
health-seeking behaviors for those who may have been exposed to SARS
and were experiencing early symptoms. The team also worked to dispel
myths; keep the general public better informed; prevent
discrimination against SARS-affected communities; and provide
guidance for institutions, agencies, and organizations hosting
international visitors from SARS-affected countries.
Rapid Situational Assessment
During the first 3 weeks of April
2003, the NCID/SARS Community Outreach Team conducted a rapid
situational analysis to determine the impact of SARS-related fear,
stigmatization, and discrimination within the Asian-American
community in the United States. The team carried out the following
activities: 1) facilitated group discussions with key opinion
leaders within the Asian community in the United States; 2)
collected and monitored the CDC Public Response Service data; 3)
collected and monitored Asian-language newspapers, Internet sites,
and other information sources; 4) reviewed polling data and other
communication information; 5) conducted community visits, panel
discussions, and media interviews; 6) solicited information from
state and regional minority health liaisons nationwide; 7) developed
ongoing relationships with the Asian-American communities;
particularly in major metropolitan areas throughout the United
States; and 8) determined new data-gathering strategies as needed.
Group Discussions
The team conducted group interviews
through teleconferences with national, state, and local influential
leaders in the Asian-American community throughout the United
States. The team also conducted group interviews with chambers of
commerce and trade association members, school officials and
representatives, state public health department staff, academicians
at universities, mental health professionals, and others. The 11
teleconferences the team conducted reached more than 70 persons who
represented more than 50 agencies, organizations, and communities.
The goals of the group interviews were the following: 1) determine
the impact of SARS-related fear on the Asian community; 2) document
examples of fear, stigmatization, and discrimination; 3) determine
strategies for identifying and reaching “hidden populations”; 4)
develop partnerships with leaders and community members of the
affected populations; 5) determine the needs of affected
populations; and 6) respond appropriately to those needs through a
targeted intervention with activities and Asian-language materials.
Five major recommendations were
derived from the facilitated group discussions with key informants:
1) develop simple, tailored SARS prevention messages; 2) develop
SARS information materials in various Asian languages; 3)
disseminate SARS information through multiple and culturally
appropriate channels, including (but not limited to) community
visits, town hall meetings, and health education and communication
channels to complement mass media messages; 4) establish
partnerships with local Asian-American community–based organizations
to educate the community; and 5) ensure that CDC would continue to
provide leadership and coordination in preventing and controlling
SARS. The relationships developed during these group discussions
allowed team members to monitor and document ongoing stigmatizing
situations related to the disease outbreak in real time and to deal
more effectively with intentional and unintentional discrimination.
CDC Public Response Service
CDC operates the Public Response
Service (CDC PRS) under contract with the American Social Health
Association. This contract provides hotline service to the general
public requesting information via telephone and email about
bioterrorism and other disease emergencies, including SARS. The NCID/SARS
Community Outreach Team worked with the CDC PRS to track a daily
sample of incoming SARS-related calls, specifically noting questions
associated with fear, stigmatization, and discrimination directed
toward the Asian-American community. This system allowed the team to
help determine specific answers to frequently asked questions for
hotline staff and to develop simple, prerecorded Asian-language
messages. Passive data collection of SARS fear-related concerns
began on April 29, 2003. During May 2003, 7,327 SARS-related calls
were received; 4,013 (54.7%) of these calls were passively sampled.
Of these sampled calls, an average of 10% of callers expressed
concerns related to fear, stigmatization, and discrimination. A
caller could express more than one concern. Major concerns included
the following: fear of buying Asian merchandise (187 calls); working
with Asians (83 calls); living near Asians (45 calls); going to
school with Asians (41 calls); and more generic issus such as being
on a cruise ship or airplane (77 calls); and church, school, or
workplace issues (65 calls). Most SARS calls related to
transmission, symptoms, and treatment of disease and travel
advisories.
Asian-Language Information
Sources
One critical component of the
team’s activities was determining where members of the
Asian-American community were getting SARS-related information. Team
members monitored English-language and Asian-language electronic,
print, and television media coverage and informal chat rooms in the
United States and other countries to stay abreast of changing
information about the nature of the SARS outbreak that could
influence fear, stigmatization, and discrimination. The assessment
showed that many people within the Asian-American community were
getting information from Asian-language newspapers, television, and
Internet sites directly from China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and other
Asian areas—usually hours ahead of information providers in the
United States. The information provided by these Asian-language
sources was often inconsistent with newspaper, television, and
Internet coverage in the United States, thus creating fear and
suspicion that the United States government might not be telling the
truth about the outbreak in this country. Independent
content-analysis research conducted by InterTrend Communications
(San Francisco, CA) compared four of the most popular Chinese
language newspapers in the United States with two popular national
mainstream English-language newspapers from March 21 to April 3,
2003 (15). InterTrend data showed that 1) Chinese-language
newspapers were more likely to highlight SARS news related to the
Chinese community in the United States or from China more
prominently than mainstream English-language newspapers; and 2)
Chinese-language newspapers were more likely to have articles on
SARS, including featured in-depth articles, than mainstream
English-language U.S. national newspapers (15). These findings
supported the team’s initial assessment (based on an informal
convenience sample of Asian-language papers).
General email inquiries sent to the
CDC communications center and information from public health
professionals, health providers, and community members led the team
to SARS-related Internet sites that contained rumors and inaccurate
information, which added to general misunderstanding, confusion, and
fear. Even legitimate public health Internet sites from different
parts of the world provided disparate information as the outbreak
unfolded, furthering uncertainty and fear in the United States. The
team also monitored Internet sites that supported community fears as
they promoted home remedies, medicinal cures, and inappropriate and
unnecessary protective equipment. Monitoring the information sources
of the affected population was a critical activity, allowing the
team to separate fact from fiction with accuracy and timeliness and
address salient issues and concerns during community visits.
Results
Rapid Situational Response
Based on its rapid situational
assessment, the team was able to develop interventions to assist in
mitigating fear, stigmatization, and discrimination. Team members
carried out the following activities: 1) advised other SARS
emergency response teams on how to minimize the risk of stigmatizing
groups in their own communications by focusing messages on the virus
and the relevant behavioral risk factors; 2) assisted with
developing culturally tailored health education materials; and 3)
conducted community visits, panel discussions, and media interviews
to positively influence negative behaviors occurring in communities.
These visits and other contacts with the Asian-American community
allowed CDC to develop ongoing relationships and helped the team
determine new data-gathering strategies.
Targeted Health Education
Materials
During a disease outbreak,
information changes rapidly as scientific evidence is collected and
analyzed. Vital components of the team’s activities were
prioritizing and translating existing information and guidance
documents and developing health education materials to address the
specific needs of the Asian-American community. An in-house
translation service did not exist, and the rapidly evolving
scientific evidence challenged the turnaround time for developing,
translating, and disseminating information. The team worked to
identify priority documents for translation and to ensure
Asian-language translation for Web and print products tailored to
the Asian-American community. To ensure accurate translations, CDC
contracted with professional translation services and had all
documents back-translated. Web-based information on SARS included
documents in traditional Chinese, simplified Chinese, Korean,
Vietnamese, and Japanese, as well as French and Spanish. The team
also created brief, recorded educational hotline messages in Chinese
and Vietnamese. The main messages for people in the United States
were the following: 1) the risk of SARS is low; 2) severe cases of
SARS have been uncommon, and there have been no deaths in the United
States; 3) methods for disease prevention in the general public are
like those of other viral diseases; and 4) although no evidence of
community spread currently exists, continued vigilance, aggressive
case management, and infection control are needed.
Community Field Visits
Team members conducted field visits
to Asian communities in Boston; New York City; Oakland, California;
San Francisco; Washington, D.C.; Edison, New Jersey; and Los Angeles
to respond to the direct needs of the communities and gather
information. The team met with community leaders, toured the
communities, informally gathered further information, and gave
community SARS presentations in seven cities, reaching approximately
500 persons. Through community visits, the team was able to 1)
provide the latest in evidence-based information on SARS with
Asian-language education materials; 2) dispel misconceptions, myths,
and rumors; 3) act as a catalyst for bringing together a broad
spectrum of organizations and persons in the community to create
local networks to promote community resiliency; and 4) provide
credibility and reassurance to those who felt vulnerable. Speakers
also presented a public health model for mitigating fear,
stigmatization, and discrimination that could be instituted by
public health officials, clinicians, and community members. Through
open discussion sessions and informal information gathering in the
community, the team found that SARS-related stigmatization was
occurring more frequently within the Asian community than from
outsiders directed toward the Asian community. The team also found
that those persons with SARS-like symptoms who used traditional
herbal physicians and pharmacies were less likely to be referred to,
or seek out, public health officials, suggesting that further
research into strategies to reach this population is needed.
Conducting community visits also showed that CDC was responding to
the needs of the community at risk for SARS-related fear,
stigmatization, and discrimination and was modeling positive
behaviors to the public.
Discussion
Other infectious disease epidemics
have been associated with specific ethnic groups. Fear,
stigmatization, and discrimination plagued Russian Jewish immigrants
when the 1892 outbreaks of typhus fever and cholera in New York City
were traced to Russian Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe (8). In
the spring of 1900, the Chinatown community in San Francisco was
faced with extreme discrimination due to an outbreak of bubonic
plague, the “black death,” attributed to rats transported on a ship
from Hong Kong (9). In 1993 an outbreak of hantavirus infection in
the Four Corners area (where the borders of four states—Arizona, New
Mexico, Utah, and Colorado—meet) of the United States was initially
referred to by reporters as a Navajo disease, which led to severe
fear, stigmatization, and discrimination of Native Americans in the
region (10). Previous scientific studies have shown that fear
associated with stigmatization and discrimination has negatively
affected public health efforts with chronic conditions and diseases
such as mental illness, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, leprosy, and
epilepsy (16–20). More recently, stigmatization associated with fear
and the AIDS epidemic negatively influenced voluntary testing,
counseling, and treatment of those infected with the disease (21).
Health providers have also seen reluctance by recent refugees and
immigrants to get tested and treated for tuberculosis because of
possible social stigmatization (22). The potential of being labeled
at-risk for having or transmitting a stigmatizing condition such as
SARS creates fear and anxiety, and an entire population of people
can be at risk for becoming stigmatized in society (23).
Protecting the health of the public
while preventing stigmatization of segments of the population during
a rapidly evolving disease outbreak is complex. The team’s
experience during the recent SARS outbreak demanded anticipatory
insight, perceptive planning, and a rapid response to a targeted
audience with specific cultural perspectives and influences. It also
required us to recognize the distinctive features of SARS in a
medical, social, and cultural context. Weiss states, “Preventing
fear and stigmatization depends on controlling or treating the
target health problem, countering tendencies of those who stigmatize
others, and supporting those who are stigmatized through emotional
support and social policies” (11).
The data collected during the rapid
situational assessment were critical in guiding activities of the
team. Both the data and the data collection process assisted the
team in establishing interpersonal relationships with community
leaders, determining priority needs, identifying responsible
intervention strategies, and developing effective communication
channels. The team was able to better understand community
perceptions and attitudes by identifying the communities’ trusted
sources of information. When conducting community visits, the team
was able to address discordant information, myths, and rumors;
provide simple Asian-language messages and materials; and act as a
catalyst to build community resiliency and prepare for the
possibility of future emerging diseases. The team was also able to
keep CDC/NCID leaders informed and to intervene when they identified
discriminatory policies, practices, and actions that were
inconsistent with evidence-based public health recommendations and
guidelines.
Quelling fear-driven stigmatization
and discrimination during the SARS outbreak required tailored
intervention strategies carried out by the SARS Community Outreach
Team. These activities complemented traditional risk communication
for the general public. To be effective, behavioral intervention
approaches, messages, and materials had to be salient for the
affected population, in this case Asian-American communities within
the United States. Further, these interventions aimed at promoting
an accurate understanding of the epidemic both in the general
population and within the affected community, that is, the dynamic
nature of the outbreak and its cause, treatment options, and
prevention strategies. Through interpersonal connections, the team
members worked to promote reassurance and enhance community
resiliency.
Public health professionals must
understand the necessary balance needed to protect the public’s
health with appropriate exclusionary practices, while at the same
time preventing fear, stigmatization, and discrimination of specific
segments of the population. As we prepare for the next new or
reemerging disease outbreak, we should also be preparing to deal
with the fear epidemic that will likely accompany it. By developing
effective behavioral and health education strategies and providing
timely attention to the special needs of affected populations, we
can ensure that, no matter what the infectious disease, we can limit
the associated epidemic of fear and stigmatization.
Acknowledgments
We thank the
following CDC staff members who volunteered their time to translate
critical information into multiple languages during the SARS
outbreak: Feng Chai, Rachanee Cheingsong, Feng Xiang Gao, Wenlin
Huang, Han Li, Wenkai Li, Xiaofang Li, Timothy Lim, Gang Liu, Yuko
Mizuno, Christine Huong Montgomery, Xuanthao Ngo, Doan Quang, Yang
Xia, and Yingtao Zhou.
Ms. Person is a
senior behavioral scientist in the National Center for Infectious
Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Her research
interests focus on health and behavior, with a specific interest in
cross-cultural behavioral interventions for the prevention and
control of infectious disease.
References
- Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. Update: severe acute respiratory
syndrome—worldwide and United States, 2003. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly
Rep 2003;52:664–5.
- Rosling L,
Rosling M. Pneumonia causes panic in Guangdong province. BMJ
2003;326:416.
- Wenzel RP,
Edmond MB. Managing SARS amidst uncertainty. N Engl J Med
2003;348:1947–8.
- Sandman P,
Lanard J. Fear is spreading faster than SARS—and so it should.
Peter Sandman Column [serial online] 2003 28 Apr. [cited 2003 May
27]. Available from: URL: http://www.psandman.com/col/SARS-1.htm
- Das V.
Stigma, contagion, defect: issues in the anthropology of public
health. Stigma and Global Health: Developing a Research Agenda;
2001 September 5–7; Bethesda, Maryland. [cited 2003 Aug 8].
Available from: http://www.stigmaconference.nih.gov/FinalDasPaper.htm
- British
Broadcasting Corporation. SARS: is global panic justified? BBC
News UK Edition. 2003 Apr 24 [cited 2003 Aug 1]. Available from:
URL: http://newsvote.bbc.co.uk/mpapps/pagetools/print/news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/2972927.stm
- Cable News
Network. Death for SARS spreaders: China. 2003 May 16 [cited 2003
May 16]. Available from: URL: http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/asiapcf/east/05/16/china.death/index.html
- Markel H.
Quarantine!: East European Jewish immigrants and the New York City
epidemics of 1892. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press;
1997.
- McClain CJ.
In search of equality: the Chinese struggle against discrimination
in nineteenth-century America. Berkeley (CA): University of
California Press; 1994.
- Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. Hantavirus infection—Southwestern
United States: interim recommendations for risk reduction. MMWR
Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 1993:42(RR-11);1–13.
- Weiss MG,
Ramakrishna J. Stigma interventions and research for international
health. Stigma and Global Health: Developing a Research Agenda;
2001 September 5–7; Bethesda, Maryland. [cited 2003 Aug 1].
Available from: URL: http://www.stigmaconference.nih.gov/FinalWeissPaper.htm
- Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. Use of quarantine to prevent
transmission of severe acute respiratory syndrome—Taiwan, 2003.
MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2003;52:680–3.
- Agency for
Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. A primer on health risk
communication principles and practices. The Agency. Available
from: URL: http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/HEC/primer.html
- Link B. On
stigma and its public health implications. Stigma and Global
Health: Developing a Research Agenda; September 5–7; 2001,
Bethesda, Maryland. [cited 2003 Aug 1]. Available from: URL:
http://www.stigmaconference.nih.gov/FinalLinkPaper.html
- InterTrend
Communications. Report: SARS article content analysis, comparison
between Chinese newspapers and mainstream newspapers in Los
Angeles and New York. Torrance (CA): InterTrend Communications;
2003.
- Schulze B,
Angermeyer MC. Subjective experiences of stigma. A focus group
study of schizophrenic patients, their relatives and mental health
professionals. Soc Sci Med 2003;56:299–312.
- Herek GM.
Thinking about AIDS and stigma: a psychologist’s perspective. J
Law Med Ethics 2002;30:594–607.
- Leprosy:
urgent need to end stigma and isolation. J Adv Nurs 2003;42:546–9.
- Carey JW,
Oxtoby MJ, Nguyen LP, Huynh V, Morgan M, Jeffery M. Tuberculosis
beliefs among recent Vietnamese refugees in New York State. Public
Health Rep 1997;112:66–72.
- MacLeod JS,
Austin JK. Stigma in the lives of adolescents with epilepsy: a
review of the literature. Epilepsy Behav 2003;4:112–7.
- Chesney MA,
Smith AW. Critical delays in HIV testing and care: the potential
role of stigma. Am Behav Sci 1999;42:1162–74.
- Sumartojo
E. When tuberculosis treatment fails. A social behavioral account
of patient adherence. Am Rev Respir Dis 1993;147:1311–20.
- Goffman E.
Stigma: notes on the management of spoiled identity. Englewood
Cliffs (NJ): Prentice-Hall; 1963.
|