Copyright 2003 AllAfrica, Inc.
Africa News
March 24, 2003 Monday
LENGTH: 875 words
HEADLINE: Tanzania: Focus On Tuberculosis
BYLINE: UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
BODY:
This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations
Like every other Monday and Friday morning, by 07:00 local time at least 100 people were
sitting quietly on the hard benches in the tuberculosis (TB) clinic at
Temeke District Hospital in the commercial capital, Dar es Salaam. The clinic was not due
to open for at least an hour, but the patients were already lined up and ready to take
their medicine before getting on with their day.
For some - in the early stages of the TB treatment known as Directly
Observed Treatment of Tuberculosis (DOTS) recommended by the World Health
Organisation (WHO) - queuing for registration and pills is a daily ritual. Others, who had
begun treatment months earlier, were just paying their monthly visit to the clinic and
would continue to treat themselves at home. Since its inception 25 years ago, DOTS is well
established and highly effective in Tanzania, and there are clinics like the one at Temeke
across the country. However, despite the well-practised routine of the system, health
workers and government officials warn of a massive resurgence of TB and
the emergence of stigma attached to the disease, largely because of its perceived
automatic link to HIV/AIDS.
"I know that many of my fellow Tanzanians are now afraid just to know that they have TB,
because they automatically assume that they are HIV/AIDS," Dr Anna Abdallah,
Tanzania's minister of health, said. She was speaking just after launching preparations
for this year's World TB Day, on Monday, which has as its theme
"DOTS cured me, it can cure you!"
"TB is curable, and we have proved this here in Tanzania. I want the
press to tell people that, while there is a link between HIV/AIDS and TB,
people should not be afraid to come forward. It is not true that every TB
patient is HIV positive," she said.
However, statistics point to a massive increase in the number of cases of TB,
mainly due to HIV/AIDS.
According to Tanzania's National Tuberculosis and Leprosy Programme, although most TB
patients are HIV negative, "sixty percent of the increase in the incidence of TB
in Tanzania can be attributed to HIV". The programme's fact sheets also state that TB
is the most common opportunistic infection in HIV/AIDS patients, and someone who is HIV
positive and infected with TB is "30 times" more likely to
become sick than someone who is HIV negative.
Since the HIV/AIDS-linked resurgence of TB in the early 1990s, the
incidence of TB cases has steadily risen. The health ministry estimates
that there were over 60,000 new cases of TB in 2001, and it expects the
figure to double in 2003. Moreover, health officials are still concerned over the number
of undetected cases of TB in the country.
"There is a lot of stigma because of the link to HIV/AIDS, and are many cases
slipping through the net," Dr Mohamed Amri, a disease prevention and control officer
for the WHO in Tanzania, said. "It is difficult to say exactly how many, but we
estimate we might actually only be seeing 60 percent of TB cases."
To make matters worse, Amri said, DOTS was only effective if patients completed the course
thoroughly with two months of daily visits to TB clinics, followed by six
months of self-treatment at home.
"This is potentially very hazardous, as stigma is lowering attendance rates for
treatment in the clinics. Relapsed cases tend to become resistant in the long run.
Resistant TB is a very serious problem and costs 100 times the amount to
treat," he said.
Rajabu Hamisi, 35, a patient attending the Temeke TB clinic, illustrates
Amri's views. "People in the community do gossip when they see us going off to the
clinics. They say we are infected with HIV/AIDS," he says. "I don't pay much
attention to them, but there are others, lots, that can't handle it."
Another patient, Binasa Bakari, said she did not experience the stigma as much, but
lamented the lack of real education in her community on TB and HIV/AIDS.
"I have understanding friends and family around me, but this is only information we
have picked up and passed amongst ourselves. I would like people to be more educated about
these diseases," she said.
Health workers at the Temeke clinic say they are doing their best to disseminate
information, but it takes time and there is an acute lack of funds for these types of
activities.
"If the community was aware of the differences between the two diseases, they could
help by bringing in the patients that are hiding [out] there," Dr Angelina Malewo,
the TB coordinator at Temeke District Hospital, noted. "We are
training some of the traditional healers and the heads of the villages. but it is at a low
level."
She said there was not enough money in the budget to hire people who could carry out
community-based health-care education so the hospital often came to rely on people
volunteering their time and knowledge.
But Anna Abdallah said that "the most sustainable advocacy can be done by the people
and their organisations, not the government. I call upon people to form organisations that
can be the mouthpieces for the fight against TB. Sufferers and
non-sufferers alike should form groups that tell people about this treatment and how
effective it is."
|