Wade Schaefer. Photo supplied

SECTION27 is tackling HIV discrimination at the Civil Aviation Authority after the body grounded a flight attendant for months after he disclosed his HIV status.

“Good vibes” – it’s how Wade Schaerer signs off his emails.

The 26-year-old Johannesburg flight attendant has worked hard to maintain an upbeat outlook on life since finding out his positive HIV-status at the end of March 2017.

In 2018 though, Schaerer, who works for a domestic South African airline, was pushed to the limits when it came to maintaining his positive vibes. His fight with the South African Civil Aviation Authority (Sacaa) for his right to work as an inflight manager and his right to choose the antiretroviral (ARV) treatment regimen best suited for him has been a bruising battle.

He has chosen not to be silent and his battle has raised questions about authority’s HIV/Aids policies that appear out of date and out of step with modern management of HIV/Aids. The application of the aviation authority’s protocols also seems random and haphazard.

Schaerer’s decision to disclose his HIV-positive status to the aviation authority saw him grounded for four months. He lost income as a result, was subjected to medical tests and psychological assessments that he describes as demeaning and degrading. It’s also left him with hefty medical bills.

“They made me feel like a nothing”, he says.

In January 2018 Schaerer was due for his routine biennial medical assessments as a cabin crew member. He says: “It wasn’t easy to decide to disclose my status but I made the choice to be open shortly after I was diagnosed because I think it helps to talk about HIV.”

The CAA obligates flight personnel to disclose their HIV-positive status or face legal action. Many HIV-positive crew members simply don’t disclose.

Healthy and armed with his HIV clinician’s report, Schaerer walked into his medical check-up confident that his status, his ARV treatment and his HIV specialist’s assessment that he had no side effects from his medication would be noted, and he’d be cleared to fly.

Instead it was the start of a nightmare for Schaerer.

“The Sacaa doctor disregarded all of these facts and just said that I was grounded and everything from that point would be subject to Sacaa protocol,” he says.

He was made to jump through hoops, undergoing a battery of tests including a neuro-psychological examination that had him draw shapes and memorise a sequence of numbers.

“It made me feel like I was in Grade 1 again. I didn’t hit my head, I have HIV,” he says.

Schaerer was sucked into the CAA’s bureaucratic maelstrom. He got few answers by email or telephone about what further tests were required of him or why his case dragged on with no final decision. He claims that on the one occasion he did get through to the CAA’s office, the doctor he spoke to slammed the phone down.

“They were unprofessional, unresponsive and insensitive. This is my livelihood but they didn’t care,” he says.

Schaerer’s personal doctor, Gail Ashford, is an HIV specialist in Johannesburg. She says the CAA protocols are obsolete and discriminatory. She believes Schaerer has been made an example of for speaking out and challenging the CAA rulebook status quo.

In June 2017 Ashford wrote to the CAA raising concerns that its protocols were out of date. She points out: “These days we start HIV- positive patients on treatment when they – like Wade – are absolutely well and have a high CD4 count. The CAA’s protocols simply don’t apply to these patients.”

She outlines more flaws in the protocols called the SA-CATS 67. Widely prescribed HIV medicines that have been on the market for the last five years are not on the CAA’s list of approved medication while at least two discontinued HIV drugs remain listed. The protocols also call for what Ashford deems “extreme and unwarranted” and costly medical tests.

Ashford explains that the CAA is misguided to tell Schaerer to change his treatment regimen. In question is Efavirenz, one of the three main components in fixed dose combination (FDC) ARV drugs, including Trivenz, the medicine that Schaerer is on. She says Efavirenz does have the potential to affect neurological functioning but this is limited, and Fixed Dose Combinations containing Efavirenz are the most widely prescribed front line ARV treatment in South Africa.

“Only a small percentage of patients develop persistent side effects to Efavirenz,” says Ashford.

Ironically, for all their “unjustified” testing, Ashford says the protocols fail to stipulate testing for syphilis or crytoccal antigen in patients with CD4 counts greater than 100 cells/ul. These tests are the ones that can detect factors that could affect neurological functioning.

“The CAA’s protocols are not in line with the national guidelines of the HIV Clinicians Society. It shows the inadequacy of their research,” says Ashford.

She’s also criticised how seemingly arbitrary the protocol is applied. “I have other patients in the airline industry that the CAA has not subjected to testing or extended grounding. Wade has definitely been targeted,” says Ashford.

She also believes that if the CAA insists on a three-month grounding period it should be on full-pay. It gives workers’ protection and would discourage decision makers from dragging their feet.

“The CAA said last year they were busy with amendments to their protocols, but their updated protocol remains identical to what it’s been for the last few years.

“If they fail to revise or amend their protocols, HIV will continue to be highly stigmatised. These protocols force people to not disclose their status, which ultimately comprises safety,” says Ashford.

Schaerer’s case has some similarities to a landmark Constitutional Court judgment in 2000 in the case Hoffmann v South African Airways (SAA). In that case Mr Hoffmann was refused employment by SAA merely because of his HIV-positive status. The court found that the refusal by SAA to employ Hoffmann as a cabin attendant because he was living with HIV violated his right to equality guaranteed by section 9 of the Constitution. Hoffman’s case was taken to court by the then AIDS Law Project, now SECTION27.

SECTION27 lawyer Ektaa Deochand who has been assisting Schaerer, says the CAA’s poor communication and dismissive attitude speaks volumes to how organisations that are intractable fail people with HIV.

“There are many more people who face the same kind of discrimination, obstacles and frustration that Wade has had to face. His case shows the wide scale impact of poor HIV/Aids protocols.

“We may think we’ve come a long way, but we are still fighting to overcome stigma because there continues to be discrete means of perpetuating discrimination,” she says.

SECTION27 will be writing to the SACAA, calling for the aviation authority to change its protocols and to review its communications, procedures and practices with regards to the handling of people living with HIV.

In responding to Schaerer’s case, CAA spokesperson Kabelo Ledwaba missed three deadlines. Eventually, Ledwaba’s colleague sent through a response that used “medical confidentiality” to avoid answering specific questions. The comment amounted to a regurgitation of CAA protocol, available through a Google search.

Schaerer, who was finally cleared to fly at the beginning of May 2018, is relieved to be working again. Now though he’s subject to annual check-ups, while his peers under 40 have recently been allowed to submit medicals at five-yearly intervals. It’s, more bureaucracy, more expenses and more discrimination, he believes.

“It’s not right, I just want to be treated fairly,” says Schaerer.

Schaerer though is the “good vibes” man. Living positively is also speaking out about what’s wrong. He calls it living real. He won’t be broken by bad rules, bureaucracy or bullies, just like he insists he won’t be broken by HIV.

In the Hoffman v South African Airways judgement, Judge Ngcobo said:

“Prejudice can never justify unfair discrimination. This country has recently emerged from institutionalised prejudice. Our law reports are replete with cases in which prejudice was taken into consideration in denying the rights that we now take for granted. Our constitutional democracy has ushered in a new era; it is an era characterised by respect for human dignity for all human beings. In this era, prejudice and stereotyping have no place. Indeed, if as a nation we are to achieve the goal of equality that we have fashioned in our constitution, we must never tolerate prejudice, either directly or indirectly. SAA, as a state organ that has a constitutional duty to uphold the constitution, may not avoid its constitutional duty by bowing to prejudice and stereotyping.” DM

The airline Schaerer works for has supported his challenge against the CAA protocols but at Schaerer’s request has not been identified in this story. The CAA protocols are industry-wide regulations that apply to all flying personnel.

Note: While Spotlight is published by SECTION27 and the Treatment Action Campaign, its editors have full editorial independence – independence that the editors guard jealously. Spotlight is a member of the South African Press Council.