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New Filipino maid suspected of having Aids sent home

By SERENA TOH

A FILIPINO maid, suspected of having the Aids virus, was sent home yesterday just one week after she arrived in Singapore.

She had tested negative a month ago during an Aids virus screening test in the Philippines. The laboratory, in Quezon City, is accredited by both the Philippines' Department of Health and Department of Labour and Employment.

But the same screening test, called the Elisa test, done in a Singapore private laboratory last week, proved positive for the maid, aged 29.

Subsequently a second test, called the Western Blot confirmation test, was inconclusive.

In Singapore, a person is considered to have the Aids virus when both tests are positive.

First case involving maid

When asked why the same Elisa screening test could show different results, doctors explained that this could be due to a "window period" when antibodies do not appear in the blood.

A Ministry of Health spokesman said yesterday this is the first case where a maid has been found positive for the Elisa screening test.

A ministry source said fewer that 20 foreigners, including three prostitutes, have tested positive for Aids since the first case was detected in Singapore in 1985.

The Health Ministry is, together with other ministries, still looking into the issue of compulsory testing for foreign workers.

The maid was brought here on Aug 21 by an employment agency, TC Personnle. Following company policy, Mr P. K. Tan, a consultant with the agency, sent her for Hepatitis B and Aids testing the next day.

Meanwhile, she was sent to her employer, Madam S. H. Tan, 29, who has a two-year-old son.

But on Wednesday, the Elisa test result was known. It proved to be positive. Mr Tan then arranged for the Western Blot test.

The maid had spent Tuesday night with the family. She had slept in the same room as Madam Tan's nieces aged three and five. Madam Tan said yesterday she did not think her two nieces needed to he tested as there was no close contact with the maid.

She worked at Clark Air Base

A doctor, contacted by The Straits Times said that there has been no cases of Aids being transmitted from a victim to other members of a household.

The maid had previously worked for two years as a domestic help for a United States captain's family at Clark Air Base in the Philippines.

Mr Tan, who said his agency is one of the few which send their maids for Aids and Hepatitis B testing, said: "I hope other compsnies will also start testing for these illnesses.

"The government should also make testing compulsory for maid agencies in the interest of families in Singapore."

A Ministry of Labour spokesman said Hepatitis B and Aids tests are not required for a work permit to be granted.

At present, foreign workers go through a medical examination which includes tests for tuberculosis, venereal disease and pregnancy.

See also[]


References[]

  • Serena Toh, "New Filipino maid suspected of having Aids sent home", The Straits Times, 29 August 1989[].

Acknowledgements[]

This article was archived by Roy Tan.