One of the best chances of stemming the tide of tuberculosis (TB) epidemic in low- and middle- income countries is to thwart the transmission cycle – by diagnosing TB early, and treating it successfully without delay. The microscope has been around since 1882 as the key standard TB diagnostic tool, and with low sensitivity (50-60%) and other challenges in detecting TB in varying conditions and co-morbidities, it is clear that it is high time we use better, more effective and efficient tools to accurately detect TB, and neither mis-diagnose nor miss TB diagnosis in myriad settings. Read more
This was a clear thought emerging out of the 'International Symposium on Tuberculosis Diagnostics: Innovating to make an impact' (ITBS 2010), organized by the International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB) in New Delhi, India (16-17 December 2010) with support from the Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND).
Although high-income countries have moved on to using better and modern diagnostic tools, many low- and middle- income countries still rely principally on sputum smear microscopy.
One of the diagnostic tools that the World Health Organization (WHO) recently endorsed is a fully automated Nucleic Acid Amplification Test (NAAT) - Xpert ® MTB/RIF - a new and novel rapid test for TB, especially relevant in high TB burden countries. According to the WHO, the test could revolutionize TB care and control by providing an accurate diagnosis for many patients in about 100 minutes, compared to current tests that can take up to three months to have results. This WHO endorsement of the NAAT has come after 18 months of rigorous assessment of its field effectiveness in the early diagnosis of TB, as well as multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) and TB complicated by HIV infection, which are more difficult to diagnose.
THREE-FOLD INCREASE IN DIAGNOSING DRUG-RESISTANT TB POSSIBLE
According to the WHO, evidence to date indicates that implementation of this test could result in a three-fold increase in the diagnosis of patients with drug-resistant TB and a doubling in the number of HIV-associated TB cases diagnosed in areas with high rates of TB and HIV.
But this new 'while you wait' test incorporates modern DNA technology that can be used outside of conventional laboratories. It also benefits from being fully automated and therefore easy and safe to use.
WHO is now calling for the fully automated NAAT to be rolled out under clearly defined conditions and as part of national plans for TB and MDR-TB care and control. Policy and operational guidance are also being issued based on findings from a series of expert reviews and a global consultation held last week in Geneva. The consultation was attended by more than a hundred representatives from national programmes, development aid agencies and international partners.
75% REDUCTION IN PRICE FOR COUNTRIES MOST AFFECTED BY TB
Affordability has been a key concern in the assessment process. Co-developer FIND (the Foundation for Innovative and New Diagnostics) announced recently it has negotiated with the manufacturer, Cepheid, a 75% reduction in the price for countries most affected by TB, compared to the current market price. Preferential pricing will be granted to 116 low- and middle- income countries where TB is endemic, with additional reduction in price once there is significant volume of demand.
"There has been a strong commitment to remove any obstacles, including financial barriers, that could prevent the successful roll-out of this new technology," said Dr Giorgio Roscigno, FIND's Chief Executive Officer in a WHO communique. "For the first time in TB control, we are enabling access to state-of-the-art technology simultaneously in low, middle and high income countries. The technology also allows testing of other diseases, which should further increase efficiency."
WHO is also releasing recommendations and guidance for countries to incorporate this test in their programmes. This includes testing protocols (or algorithms) to optimize the use and benefits of the new technology in those persons where it is needed most.
Though there have been major improvements in TB care and control, tuberculosis killed an estimated 1.7 million people in 2009 and 9.4 million people developed active TB last year.
Bobby Ramakant - CNS
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Showing posts with label treatment and care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label treatment and care. Show all posts
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Flashback: CNS Stop-TB Initiative in 2010
As we move towards the end of 2010, we would like to take this opportunity to wish you all Seasons Greetings and a happy, healthy and peaceful new year in 2011. We at CNS Stop-TB Initiative will like to thank our thousands of visitors for their support and participation on a range of issues around tuberculosis (TB) control and TB-HIV co-infection. Read more
The Stop-TB eForum in 2010
**************************
The Stop-TB eForum was established by the Health and Development Networks (HDN) in early 2001 in lead up to the first Stop TB Partners' Forum to facilitate online information exchange and dialogue on a range of TB-related issues on a daily basis.
MoU
---
In 2010, a memorandum of understanding between the Stop TB Partnership, the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union) and the International HIV/AIDS Alliance was signed to continue supporting the Stop-TB eForum over coming years. We thank the Stop-TB members for speaking their world through the platform.
ISSUES in 2010 on Stop-TB eForum
-------------------------------
Reflecting back on the year, we are pleased to remind you of a few issues and topics that struck a particular cord with members, generating lively dialogue. Some of these issues include:
- TB in mobile populations
- Jailing ('confining') of TB patients
- The Global Plan to Stop TB 2011-2015
- TB care and control in civil/ political unrest
- TB care and control in natural calamities
- Infection control in healthcare settings
- TB in children
- TB in people using injecting drugs
- TB/HIV collaborative activities in different countries
- Drug-resistant TB - both multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB) and extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB)
- Role of affected communities in driving the responses to TB/HIV
- TB and poverty
- Issues around research for new and better TB diagnostics, drugs and vaccines
- TB related stigma
- Tuberculosis and tobacco use
- Tuberculosis and diabetes co-morbidity
- Hepatitis C, TB, HIV and injecting drug-use in prisons
- TB-HIV co-infection
- Adherence to anti-TB treatment
- Isoniazid preventive therapy (IPT)
- Lung health
- Year of the lungs (2010)
- Lung health
- Year of the lungs (2010)
ON-SITE ISSUE-BASED COVERAGE of TB conferences in 2010:
------------------------------------------------------
With support from the community writers of Citizen News Service (CNS) CNS provided on-site coverage from a range of events related to TB in 2010.
1. 41st Union World Conference on Lung Health, Berlin, Germany
FIFTY FIVE (55) CNS articles are online at: http://www.citizen-news.org/search/label/Berlin%202010
2. Consultative workshop of TB and poverty sub-working group of Stop TB Partnership (29-30 October 2010)
CNS coverage is online at: http://www.citizen-news.org/2010/12/cns-coverage-from-tb-and-poverty-sub.html
3. Open Forum 4: on key issues in TB drug development, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (18-19 August 2010)
CNS coverage online at: http://www.citizen-news.org/2010/09/cns-coverage-in-lead-up-to-and-on-site.html
4. XVIII International AIDS Conference, Austria (July 2010)
CNS Coverage online at: http://www.citizen-news.org/2010/08/cns-coverage-in-lead-up-to-and-on-site.html
5. "Research and development of new TB vaccines" Symposium, Zaragoza, Spain (3-4 June 2010)
CNS coverage online at: http://www.citizen-news.org/2010/06/cns-coverage-from-research-and.html
6. 2nd Global Forum on TB Vaccines, Tallinn, Estonia (21-24 September 2010)
CNS coverage online at: http://www.citizen-news.org/2010/10/cns-coverage-from-2nd-global-forum-on.html
7. International Symposium on Tuberculosis Diagnostics (ITBS 2010) - 16-17 December 2010
CNS coverage online at: http://www.citizen-news.org/search/label/ITBS%202010
ARCHIVES
---------
The Stop-TB eForum archives are available online at: www.HealthDev.org/stop-tb
HealthDev.net
--------------
HealthDev.net continues to host online consultation 24 hours/ 365 days a year and be welcome to speak-your-world on www.HealthDev.net
Winter break
------------
The Stop-TB eForum will be closing today for the winter-break and resume postings on Monday, 3rd January 2011.
A joy-filled Christmas and happy New Year!
CNS Stop-TB Initiative
Email: stoptb@citizen-news.org
ASICON 2010 showcases modern advancements in surgery
The 70th annual conference of Association of Surgeons of India (ASICON) being held in All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) campus, New Delhi, India, is showcasing recent and most modern advancements in surgery. More than 7000 surgeons from India and other countries are participating in ASICON 2010 (15-20 December ,2010), said Dr NK Pandey, national President of Association of Surgeons of India (ASI) and Managing Director of Asian Institute of Medical Sciences (AIMS). Dr Pandey is a recepient of the most coveted award in medicine in India - Dr BC Roy Award. Read more
Many illustrious surgeons from India are present in ASICON 2010 including BC Roy Awardee and President ASI Dr NK Pandey, honorary secretary of ASI Dr RK Karwasra, President-elect of ASI Dr BK Sinha, Treasurer of ASI Dr PS Bakshi and WHO Director-General's Awardee (2005) and former Head of Surgery Dept CSMMU Professor (Dr) Rama Kant.
"The 70th annual conference of the Association of Surgeons of India (ASICON) showcases advancements in surgeries in the recent decade. Surgery, which is both art and science, is the most vital and critical part of medical science. Numerous types of surgeries and procedures were telecasted live from hospitals in India and abroad to the venue in ASICON city ,which is set up in the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Delhi campus. Basic and advanced procedures were shown live to the audience. Around 1300 research papers were presented too" said eminent Surgeon Dr NK Pandey.
"Newer and more advanced specialities are being added to surgery. The technique of natural orifice technological endoscopic surgery (NOTES) is a an extremely critical development in the field of surgery. It will introduce a dynamic shift in the field of surgery by taking surgical precision to a new level and cutting down on recovery time. The evaluation process for this has already started. In this surgery, not even a stitch is required. Also the simulator based surgical training, which is the latest and very important development, will bring down the rate of mistakes in surgery by almost five hundred percent. The safety aspect for the patient is doubled. Minimally invasive techniques introduced in the recent past have resulted in a drastic reduction of morbidity and mortality occurring due to surgical procedures. Patients benefit by reduced pain and a faster recovery because of the procedure" further added Dr NK Pandey, who is the surgeon heading the premier healthcare centre - Asian Institute of Medical Sciences.
"The need of the hour is to develop a comprehensive health plan, so that benefits of modern medicine and good health reach to the remotest of areas, and rural population benefits from these advancements. Unfortunately, health infrastructure needs to develop at a much faster pace in order to meet demands of growing healthcare needs of the population, be it hospital beds, medical education college or universities" rightly said Dr NK Pandey.
The ASI through it's network of chapters all over the country is working to benefit the poor who need basic healthcare amenities and most importantly need to learn the importance of preventive healthcare practices.Also the association through it's chapters also has a valuable data bank to suggest the pattern and type of diseases on the rise in different geographical locations in the country.
The ASI also plans to collaborate with various nodal government health agencies to further it's agenda of making India a surgical hub, furthering medical tourism and making latest surgical techniques accessible to the backward and rural areas through it's network. (CNS)
Published in:
The Asian Tribune, Thailand/ Sri Lanka
American Chronicle, USA
The Nigerian Voice, Lagos, Nigeria
Modern Ghana, Accra, Ghana
Florida Today, Florida, USA
The Pakistan Christian Post, Pakistan
All News Ghana, Accra, Ghana
News Blaze, California, USA
Citizen News Service (CNS), Thailand
Elites TV, California, USA
Banderas News, Mexico
Yahoo! News
Google News
India Times, Delhi, India
Bio Med Middle East, UAE
Pakistan 7x24 News, Pakistan
The South Asia Mail
PV Writers, Mexico
Topix News, Turkey
Bihar and Jharkhand News Service (BJNS)
AllVoices.com
HarryPottering.com
Topix com
Twitter com
NowPublic.com
Keegy India com
Laparoscopic Surgery com
Many illustrious surgeons from India are present in ASICON 2010 including BC Roy Awardee and President ASI Dr NK Pandey, honorary secretary of ASI Dr RK Karwasra, President-elect of ASI Dr BK Sinha, Treasurer of ASI Dr PS Bakshi and WHO Director-General's Awardee (2005) and former Head of Surgery Dept CSMMU Professor (Dr) Rama Kant.
"The 70th annual conference of the Association of Surgeons of India (ASICON) showcases advancements in surgeries in the recent decade. Surgery, which is both art and science, is the most vital and critical part of medical science. Numerous types of surgeries and procedures were telecasted live from hospitals in India and abroad to the venue in ASICON city ,which is set up in the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Delhi campus. Basic and advanced procedures were shown live to the audience. Around 1300 research papers were presented too" said eminent Surgeon Dr NK Pandey.
"Newer and more advanced specialities are being added to surgery. The technique of natural orifice technological endoscopic surgery (NOTES) is a an extremely critical development in the field of surgery. It will introduce a dynamic shift in the field of surgery by taking surgical precision to a new level and cutting down on recovery time. The evaluation process for this has already started. In this surgery, not even a stitch is required. Also the simulator based surgical training, which is the latest and very important development, will bring down the rate of mistakes in surgery by almost five hundred percent. The safety aspect for the patient is doubled. Minimally invasive techniques introduced in the recent past have resulted in a drastic reduction of morbidity and mortality occurring due to surgical procedures. Patients benefit by reduced pain and a faster recovery because of the procedure" further added Dr NK Pandey, who is the surgeon heading the premier healthcare centre - Asian Institute of Medical Sciences.
"The need of the hour is to develop a comprehensive health plan, so that benefits of modern medicine and good health reach to the remotest of areas, and rural population benefits from these advancements. Unfortunately, health infrastructure needs to develop at a much faster pace in order to meet demands of growing healthcare needs of the population, be it hospital beds, medical education college or universities" rightly said Dr NK Pandey.
The ASI through it's network of chapters all over the country is working to benefit the poor who need basic healthcare amenities and most importantly need to learn the importance of preventive healthcare practices.Also the association through it's chapters also has a valuable data bank to suggest the pattern and type of diseases on the rise in different geographical locations in the country.
The ASI also plans to collaborate with various nodal government health agencies to further it's agenda of making India a surgical hub, furthering medical tourism and making latest surgical techniques accessible to the backward and rural areas through it's network. (CNS)
Published in:
The Asian Tribune, Thailand/ Sri Lanka
American Chronicle, USA
The Nigerian Voice, Lagos, Nigeria
Modern Ghana, Accra, Ghana
Florida Today, Florida, USA
The Pakistan Christian Post, Pakistan
All News Ghana, Accra, Ghana
News Blaze, California, USA
Citizen News Service (CNS), Thailand
Elites TV, California, USA
Banderas News, Mexico
Yahoo! News
Google News
India Times, Delhi, India
Bio Med Middle East, UAE
Pakistan 7x24 News, Pakistan
The South Asia Mail
PV Writers, Mexico
Topix News, Turkey
Bihar and Jharkhand News Service (BJNS)
AllVoices.com
HarryPottering.com
Topix com
Twitter com
NowPublic.com
Keegy India com
Laparoscopic Surgery com
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Early diagnosis and treatment for tuberculosis can turn the tide
Although significant advances in tuberculosis (TB) control have taken place over the past years, the TB levels are not going down as fast as expected earlier (10% decline every year was projected). Not to say that commendable work hasn’t happened in TB control – rather TB control has received major thrust over the past decade certainly in terms of programming, strategy (new Global Plan to Stop TB 2011-2015 was just released in October 2010), funding and research initiatives as well. However despite of all the good, the new TB cases continue to emerge and TB levels haven't reduced as earlier estimated (TB rates are coming down, but coming down too slowly). Read more
If we diagnose TB early, we also prevent TB from spreading to others. Cutting TB transmission cycle can potentially turn the tide, said experts.
WE ARE NOT DETECTING TB EARLY ENOUGH Where are we missing the defining pulse? Most likely we are not detecting TB early enough and mis-diagnosis and missed-diagnosis of TB are other challenges among many others that continue to puzzle us, said Dr Pawan Sharma, convener of the 'International Symposium on Tuberculosis Diagnostics: Innovating to make an impact' (ITBS 2010).
The ITBS 2010 is being organized by the International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB) in New Delhi, India (16-17 December 2010) with support from the Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND).
"In roughly 55 years we have squandered our precious legacy of chemotherapy for TB…" said Dr William E Bishai from John Hopkins University. According to the World Health Organization, anti-TB drug resistance is a result of poor programme performance of DOTS – the WHO recommended strategy for treating TB. Patients with drug-resistant forms of TB – like multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB) or extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) have severely limited treatment options, or at times with XDR-TB, there is virtually no option left for treatment. For patients with XDR-TB that have no treatment option left it is like going back to the pre-antibiotic era before 1940s where TB was not treatable.
"How did we get into this mess?" asked Dr William Bishai. Lack of prevention (vaccines), lack of treatment, lack of diagnostics and biomarkers and lack of appreciation of complexity were key reasons listed by Dr Bishai for the difficult challenge TB poses today.
"Microscope remains the fundamental diagnostic tool since 1882 when Dr Robert Koch invented it" said a representative of Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND).
In a study done in India, it was found that the direct costs incurred on TB diagnosis and treatment were just 1/5 of the total costs a patient incurs during TB therapy (direct cost: 0.5 billion, indirect costs: 2.5 billion). A lot of these costs a patient incurs happen before he or she gets to the proper TB clinic – and a significant amount of time is also lost as well, at times spanning months and years till proper therapy begins. Also in terms of spreading TB infection, it is very important to diagnose TB as early as possible to cut transmission cycle.
The DOTS expansion has not resulted in better case detection rates (case detection has more or less remained steady) – despite of rapid expansion of DOTS - so we need to do more than implementing DOTS, said the FIND representative.
In a study done by Dr Girzybowski, it was found that if any of the parents have smear-negative TB, children were found to have the same chance to get infected with TB as someone in the community (which is much lower), however if the parent had smear positive TB, then at least 35% chance exist of the children to get infected with TB.
No doubt, there is a strategic need for early diagnosis of TB, and sensitivity and speed of the diagnostic tools are keys to cut the transmission cycle, said FIND representative.
Another good example comes from Peru where Peruvian TB control programme is doing all what is possible to do in that scenario. TB rates in Peru dropped phenomenally in early years but since past 5 years, the rates have more or less remained same. Probably the need to diagnose TB early in those who are currently either being missed or those who get diagnosed very late is crucial and compelling.
Just last week, the WHO endorsed a new and novel rapid test for TB, especially relevant in countries most affected by the disease. The test could revolutionize TB care and control by providing an accurate diagnosis for many patients in about 100 minutes, compared to current tests that can take up to three months to have results.
"This new test represents a major milestone for global TB diagnosis and care. It also represents new hope for the millions of people who are at the highest risk of TB and drug-resistant disease." said Dr Mario Raviglione, Director of WHO's Stop TB Department. "We have the scientific evidence, we have defined the policy, and now we aim to support implementation for impact in countries."
WHO's endorsement of the rapid test, which is a fully automated NAAT (nucleic acid amplification test) follows 18 months of rigorous assessment of its field effectiveness in the early diagnosis of TB, as well as multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) and TB complicated by HIV infection, which are more difficult to diagnose.
Evidence to date indicates that implementation of this test could result in a three-fold increase in the diagnosis of patients with drug-resistant TB and a doubling in the number of HIV-associated TB cases diagnosed in areas with high rates of TB and HIV.
WE ARE NOT DETECTING TB EARLY ENOUGH Where are we missing the defining pulse? Most likely we are not detecting TB early enough and mis-diagnosis and missed-diagnosis of TB are other challenges among many others that continue to puzzle us, said Dr Pawan Sharma, convener of the 'International Symposium on Tuberculosis Diagnostics: Innovating to make an impact' (ITBS 2010).
The ITBS 2010 is being organized by the International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB) in New Delhi, India (16-17 December 2010) with support from the Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND).
"In roughly 55 years we have squandered our precious legacy of chemotherapy for TB…" said Dr William E Bishai from John Hopkins University. According to the World Health Organization, anti-TB drug resistance is a result of poor programme performance of DOTS – the WHO recommended strategy for treating TB. Patients with drug-resistant forms of TB – like multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB) or extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) have severely limited treatment options, or at times with XDR-TB, there is virtually no option left for treatment. For patients with XDR-TB that have no treatment option left it is like going back to the pre-antibiotic era before 1940s where TB was not treatable.
"How did we get into this mess?" asked Dr William Bishai. Lack of prevention (vaccines), lack of treatment, lack of diagnostics and biomarkers and lack of appreciation of complexity were key reasons listed by Dr Bishai for the difficult challenge TB poses today.
"Microscope remains the fundamental diagnostic tool since 1882 when Dr Robert Koch invented it" said a representative of Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND).
In a study done in India, it was found that the direct costs incurred on TB diagnosis and treatment were just 1/5 of the total costs a patient incurs during TB therapy (direct cost: 0.5 billion, indirect costs: 2.5 billion). A lot of these costs a patient incurs happen before he or she gets to the proper TB clinic – and a significant amount of time is also lost as well, at times spanning months and years till proper therapy begins. Also in terms of spreading TB infection, it is very important to diagnose TB as early as possible to cut transmission cycle.
The DOTS expansion has not resulted in better case detection rates (case detection has more or less remained steady) – despite of rapid expansion of DOTS - so we need to do more than implementing DOTS, said the FIND representative.
In a study done by Dr Girzybowski, it was found that if any of the parents have smear-negative TB, children were found to have the same chance to get infected with TB as someone in the community (which is much lower), however if the parent had smear positive TB, then at least 35% chance exist of the children to get infected with TB.
No doubt, there is a strategic need for early diagnosis of TB, and sensitivity and speed of the diagnostic tools are keys to cut the transmission cycle, said FIND representative.
Another good example comes from Peru where Peruvian TB control programme is doing all what is possible to do in that scenario. TB rates in Peru dropped phenomenally in early years but since past 5 years, the rates have more or less remained same. Probably the need to diagnose TB early in those who are currently either being missed or those who get diagnosed very late is crucial and compelling.
Just last week, the WHO endorsed a new and novel rapid test for TB, especially relevant in countries most affected by the disease. The test could revolutionize TB care and control by providing an accurate diagnosis for many patients in about 100 minutes, compared to current tests that can take up to three months to have results.
"This new test represents a major milestone for global TB diagnosis and care. It also represents new hope for the millions of people who are at the highest risk of TB and drug-resistant disease." said Dr Mario Raviglione, Director of WHO's Stop TB Department. "We have the scientific evidence, we have defined the policy, and now we aim to support implementation for impact in countries."
WHO's endorsement of the rapid test, which is a fully automated NAAT (nucleic acid amplification test) follows 18 months of rigorous assessment of its field effectiveness in the early diagnosis of TB, as well as multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) and TB complicated by HIV infection, which are more difficult to diagnose.
Evidence to date indicates that implementation of this test could result in a three-fold increase in the diagnosis of patients with drug-resistant TB and a doubling in the number of HIV-associated TB cases diagnosed in areas with high rates of TB and HIV.
Bobby Ramakant - CNS
Published in:
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
News Blazes News, California, USA
Now Public News, India
Elites TV News, California, USA
Topix News, Turkey
Healthdev.net
World Care Council, USA
American Chronicle, USA
Hurrypotering.com
Connect.in.com
Jerseyshorereality.com
Silobreaker News
Frienndfeed.com
Gleekifi.com
Published in:
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
News Blazes News, California, USA
Now Public News, India
Elites TV News, California, USA
Topix News, Turkey
Healthdev.net
World Care Council, USA
American Chronicle, USA
Hurrypotering.com
Connect.in.com
Jerseyshorereality.com
Silobreaker News
Frienndfeed.com
Gleekifi.com
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Winning project pictures life with Tuberculosis
The TB Photovoice Project, the winner of the 2010 TB Survival Prize, started as a one man's way to deal with the loss of his beloved ones to tuberculosis (TB). By now, it is touching the lives of many people around the world, helping – through pictures and narratives – to empower and raise the voices of persons and communities affected by the disease. Read more
The Tuberculosis Survival Prize is given each year by the Tuberculosis Survival Project, with support from the Lilly MDR-TB Partnership. The prize, an annual award of USD 2000, is awarded in recognition of innovation in TB/MDR-TB advocacy and social mobilization by individuals, groups or NGOs working in the field of HIV/TB or TB/MDR-TB. During a ceremony at the 41st Union World Conference on Lung Health in Berlin, Germany (November 11-15) the prize this year went to TB Photovoice.
The TB Photovoice Project provides cameras to community members (survivors, caregivers, friends, family) affected by TB, who take photographs that help them identify and improve their communities. The photographs and their stories represent what is happening in the participants' lives and serve as a point for discussion about what can be done to change the present situation in regards to TB, adherence, support, stigma, education and related issues. These photographs and their accompanying narratives give a face and voice to TB. There are initiatives in among others Brazil, Mexico, Thailand and the United States. The Stop TB Survivor award enables the project to start up a TB Photovoice in Kenya too.
Romel Lacson, founder of the Amaya-Lacson TB Photovoice Project, was personally affected by the disease, losing both his wife Claudia Amaya and their newborn daughter Emma to tuberculosis meningitis in 2004. "The project was sort of my reaction to that," he said at the sidelines of the conference. "I did not have TB myself but my family and my wife's family were providing care of her throughout the time she was in hospital. We felt very isolated, very disconnected from the world. When Claudia passed away it turned my life upside down. I had to try to make sense."
Over the years, the various initiatives - in partnership with local organizations - gave different meanings to TB Photovoice. "They have a basic foundation for it but depending on the mission of the particular organization and on the coordinator who is implementing and facilitating it, it really takes a character of its own," Lacson says. Yet there are core aspects that remain, such as photography, using images, narrative storytelling, dialogue, group discussions and ethical use of the camera. "Part of the training is to instill a sense of responsibility of the photographer that they take pictures that don't invade people's privacy or are not going to hinder any kind of confidentiality of what happened."
Eva M. Moya is involved with setting up TB Photovoice projects throughout the U.S.-Mexico border and in Mexico. With resources of the Amaya-Lacson Foundation a pilot TB Photovoice (Voices and Images of Tuberculosis) Project in the United States-Mexican border region was started in 2006. "We immediately realized we had to do it in a bi-national fashion,” Moya recalls. “It is a border community where tuberculosis knows no boundaries, where it doesn't need a visa to travel north or south."
Two groups of persons affected by TB were formed and received training, setting up photo galleries within four months. Policy and decision makers were invited and witnessed the work of the participants, and were asked to make commitments. "One of the beauties of this methodology is that you can actually see commitments," Moya says. "Which you can follow through time with decision, policy makers and health authorities so that there could be improvement. Whether it is in the area of access of services, in the leveraging of resources, or in making services much more focused on the person and services that are free of stigma and discrimination."
Through a partnership with Project Concern International SOLUCION TB the TB Photovoice (Voices and Images of Tuberculosis) initiative now includes nine projects in Mexico. Galleries that continue to move between communities. It was followed by Nuestra Casa, a three-dimensional house that reflects the life and stories of people affected by TB.
TB Photovoice asks its participants to be critical of their own community and their reality. "We ask them to tell us what it is that they see, to explain what is happening in their lives, to indicate where the problems, issues and challenges are. And then to be able to work with solutions," Moya says. Eventually many participants become activists. "There is a lot of overcoming of fears, sometimes of embarrassment, of distress, of sadness, of actually even rage, because several of our participants were unfortunately misdiagnosed. And they sort of transform that into a very powerful experience and they say well, we need to let the larger community know. It is very powerful when the story comes from the person affected and is presented to decision and policymakers, because it comes actually from the perspective of having lived the experience."
Rachel C. Orduño, one of the first participants in the U.S.-Mexico border project, lived the experience. She was diagnosed with TB in 2006 after three years of many misdiagnoses. Her treatment lasted 9 months. Her (at that time) 3 year old niece also had active TB and six other family members were treated for latent TB. Orduño remembers feeling helpless, frustrated and angry because of the misdiagnosis. Participating in the TB Photovoice Project altered these emotions.
"For people who are going through treatment, TB survivors, it is really important to share with other people," Orduño stresses. "For me TB Photovoice was first and foremost a support group. We gave each other advice and support and direction. The activist and advocacy aspect of it came later, once we felt like we can do something about it: we can't just ask the medical establishment to take care of us, we can't expect the government to look after us, we need to do something."
For Orduño that motivation came from being a group, having people to share ideas and the feeling of having something to contribute. "Now I don't see the power differential of the medical expert and the patient," she says. "Now it is the medical professional who got a lot of training plus the persons affected by the TB experience, the experience that makes us the experts. And seeing how we can be partners in developing a lot more effective treatments, how to reach the public at large and the public services."
The project even helped diminish her feelings of guilt. "That is something else that people don't tell you, that sometimes you feel very guilty for transmitting the disease to your most loved ones," she says. "I learned that for every year that I was untreated and had active TB, I could have infected 15 other people. So I may have possibly caused 45 infections. However by speaking up now, by spreading the word that we can do something about it, every one of us, all of us who have been directly been affected by TB and every medical professional and everyone who knows their story, we can all contribute. We can all try and do our best to recognize the symptoms and just be aware that TB is out there everywhere in the world. Anyone that breathes is at risk so everyone has a moral obligation and it would be a public service to do your part to contain it."
Babs Verblackt - CNS
(The author is a freelance journalist and a Fellow of CNS Writers' Bureau)
Published in:
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka/Thailand
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Scoop News, New Zea Land
Pakistan Christian Post, Karachi, Pakistan
Elites TV News, USA
The Nigerian Voice, Nigeria
World News Network(WNN), USA
Now Public News, India
PVwriter News, Mexico
All Voices News, India
Montreal Sun, Montreal
Vancouver Herald, Vancouver, Canada
Indonesia Globe, Jakarta, Indonesia
Bali Times, Bali
Gkrom.com
Healthdev.net
Connect.in.com
Musicifi.com
Jersey Shore Reality
Truebloodifi.com
Merolinknews.com
Twitter.com
The Tuberculosis Survival Prize is given each year by the Tuberculosis Survival Project, with support from the Lilly MDR-TB Partnership. The prize, an annual award of USD 2000, is awarded in recognition of innovation in TB/MDR-TB advocacy and social mobilization by individuals, groups or NGOs working in the field of HIV/TB or TB/MDR-TB. During a ceremony at the 41st Union World Conference on Lung Health in Berlin, Germany (November 11-15) the prize this year went to TB Photovoice.
The TB Photovoice Project provides cameras to community members (survivors, caregivers, friends, family) affected by TB, who take photographs that help them identify and improve their communities. The photographs and their stories represent what is happening in the participants' lives and serve as a point for discussion about what can be done to change the present situation in regards to TB, adherence, support, stigma, education and related issues. These photographs and their accompanying narratives give a face and voice to TB. There are initiatives in among others Brazil, Mexico, Thailand and the United States. The Stop TB Survivor award enables the project to start up a TB Photovoice in Kenya too.
Romel Lacson, founder of the Amaya-Lacson TB Photovoice Project, was personally affected by the disease, losing both his wife Claudia Amaya and their newborn daughter Emma to tuberculosis meningitis in 2004. "The project was sort of my reaction to that," he said at the sidelines of the conference. "I did not have TB myself but my family and my wife's family were providing care of her throughout the time she was in hospital. We felt very isolated, very disconnected from the world. When Claudia passed away it turned my life upside down. I had to try to make sense."
Over the years, the various initiatives - in partnership with local organizations - gave different meanings to TB Photovoice. "They have a basic foundation for it but depending on the mission of the particular organization and on the coordinator who is implementing and facilitating it, it really takes a character of its own," Lacson says. Yet there are core aspects that remain, such as photography, using images, narrative storytelling, dialogue, group discussions and ethical use of the camera. "Part of the training is to instill a sense of responsibility of the photographer that they take pictures that don't invade people's privacy or are not going to hinder any kind of confidentiality of what happened."
Eva M. Moya is involved with setting up TB Photovoice projects throughout the U.S.-Mexico border and in Mexico. With resources of the Amaya-Lacson Foundation a pilot TB Photovoice (Voices and Images of Tuberculosis) Project in the United States-Mexican border region was started in 2006. "We immediately realized we had to do it in a bi-national fashion,” Moya recalls. “It is a border community where tuberculosis knows no boundaries, where it doesn't need a visa to travel north or south."
Two groups of persons affected by TB were formed and received training, setting up photo galleries within four months. Policy and decision makers were invited and witnessed the work of the participants, and were asked to make commitments. "One of the beauties of this methodology is that you can actually see commitments," Moya says. "Which you can follow through time with decision, policy makers and health authorities so that there could be improvement. Whether it is in the area of access of services, in the leveraging of resources, or in making services much more focused on the person and services that are free of stigma and discrimination."
Through a partnership with Project Concern International SOLUCION TB the TB Photovoice (Voices and Images of Tuberculosis) initiative now includes nine projects in Mexico. Galleries that continue to move between communities. It was followed by Nuestra Casa, a three-dimensional house that reflects the life and stories of people affected by TB.
TB Photovoice asks its participants to be critical of their own community and their reality. "We ask them to tell us what it is that they see, to explain what is happening in their lives, to indicate where the problems, issues and challenges are. And then to be able to work with solutions," Moya says. Eventually many participants become activists. "There is a lot of overcoming of fears, sometimes of embarrassment, of distress, of sadness, of actually even rage, because several of our participants were unfortunately misdiagnosed. And they sort of transform that into a very powerful experience and they say well, we need to let the larger community know. It is very powerful when the story comes from the person affected and is presented to decision and policymakers, because it comes actually from the perspective of having lived the experience."
Rachel C. Orduño, one of the first participants in the U.S.-Mexico border project, lived the experience. She was diagnosed with TB in 2006 after three years of many misdiagnoses. Her treatment lasted 9 months. Her (at that time) 3 year old niece also had active TB and six other family members were treated for latent TB. Orduño remembers feeling helpless, frustrated and angry because of the misdiagnosis. Participating in the TB Photovoice Project altered these emotions.
"For people who are going through treatment, TB survivors, it is really important to share with other people," Orduño stresses. "For me TB Photovoice was first and foremost a support group. We gave each other advice and support and direction. The activist and advocacy aspect of it came later, once we felt like we can do something about it: we can't just ask the medical establishment to take care of us, we can't expect the government to look after us, we need to do something."
For Orduño that motivation came from being a group, having people to share ideas and the feeling of having something to contribute. "Now I don't see the power differential of the medical expert and the patient," she says. "Now it is the medical professional who got a lot of training plus the persons affected by the TB experience, the experience that makes us the experts. And seeing how we can be partners in developing a lot more effective treatments, how to reach the public at large and the public services."
The project even helped diminish her feelings of guilt. "That is something else that people don't tell you, that sometimes you feel very guilty for transmitting the disease to your most loved ones," she says. "I learned that for every year that I was untreated and had active TB, I could have infected 15 other people. So I may have possibly caused 45 infections. However by speaking up now, by spreading the word that we can do something about it, every one of us, all of us who have been directly been affected by TB and every medical professional and everyone who knows their story, we can all contribute. We can all try and do our best to recognize the symptoms and just be aware that TB is out there everywhere in the world. Anyone that breathes is at risk so everyone has a moral obligation and it would be a public service to do your part to contain it."
Babs Verblackt - CNS
(The author is a freelance journalist and a Fellow of CNS Writers' Bureau)
Published in:
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka/Thailand
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Scoop News, New Zea Land
Pakistan Christian Post, Karachi, Pakistan
Elites TV News, USA
The Nigerian Voice, Nigeria
World News Network(WNN), USA
Now Public News, India
PVwriter News, Mexico
All Voices News, India
Montreal Sun, Montreal
Vancouver Herald, Vancouver, Canada
Indonesia Globe, Jakarta, Indonesia
Bali Times, Bali
Gkrom.com
Healthdev.net
Connect.in.com
Musicifi.com
Jersey Shore Reality
Truebloodifi.com
Merolinknews.com
Twitter.com
Monday, December 13, 2010
International Symposium on TB Diagnostics: Innovating to make an impact
The "International Symposium on TB Diagnostics: Innovating to make an impact" (ITBS 2010) shall soon be held in New Delhi, India during 16-17 December 2010. It is being organized by the International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB). ITBS 2010 is being co-sponsored by Aeras Global TB Vaccine Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND). Read more
"This is the fourth meeting in the International Tuberculosis (TB) Symposia (ITBS) series that has become a regular biennial event at ICGEB, New Delhi. It is heartening to note that every meeting has attracted increasingly good number of leading TB experts from across the world as well as large number of young researchers from across India and other countries. However, tuberculosis still continues to inflict one third of the global population, causing nearly nine million new cases of tuberculosis (TB) and death of nearly 1.8 millions per year. Thanks to persistent efforts of research community across the world, Mycobacterium tuberculosis is beginning to reveal its secrets, though slowly and reluctantly. Once again it is time for us to get together, pool our resources, and form networks in order to evolve more effective intervention strategies. This Symposium is an attempt to facilitate this process" said Dr Pawan Sharma, Convener of ITBS 2010.
"It is perhaps the most opportune time to address issues in TB Diagnostics. With the largest pipeline of new drugs and drug combinations in place, 'potentially effective against all forms of disease in all patients' (TB Alliance), and a similar pipeline of TB vaccines in various stages of clinical trials, it is only imperative to devise point-of-care diagnostic methods, which are not only sensitive and specific but also time-effective and cost-effective. This Symposium provides an opportunity to take stock of deliverables in the area of TB diagnostics against the backdrop of advances made in the basic biology of the disease. I hope that this meeting offers a platform for national and global policy-makers, academia, industry and funding agencies to come together and take stock of the current status of TB diagnostics and find ways for translating research results into reliable point-of-care methods for diagnosis, and to develop more robust strategies for epidemiology studies. At this juncture, India being home to the largest number of TB patients in the world, presents a challenge and an opportunity to emerge as a global leader in the area of TB diagnostics" added Dr Sharma.
The ITBS 2010 Symposium will provide a platform for these deliberations in the following scientific sessions:
- Pathophysiology of Tuberculosis and the Challenge of Diagnosis
- Trailing the Bug: TB Diagnostics Today & Tomorrow
- Changing the Landscape of TB Diagnostics in India
- Diagnostics Innovations from India: View from Industry and Clinic
- Diagnostics Innovations in India: Enablers and Barriers
"This is the fourth meeting in the International Tuberculosis (TB) Symposia (ITBS) series that has become a regular biennial event at ICGEB, New Delhi. It is heartening to note that every meeting has attracted increasingly good number of leading TB experts from across the world as well as large number of young researchers from across India and other countries. However, tuberculosis still continues to inflict one third of the global population, causing nearly nine million new cases of tuberculosis (TB) and death of nearly 1.8 millions per year. Thanks to persistent efforts of research community across the world, Mycobacterium tuberculosis is beginning to reveal its secrets, though slowly and reluctantly. Once again it is time for us to get together, pool our resources, and form networks in order to evolve more effective intervention strategies. This Symposium is an attempt to facilitate this process" said Dr Pawan Sharma, Convener of ITBS 2010.
"It is perhaps the most opportune time to address issues in TB Diagnostics. With the largest pipeline of new drugs and drug combinations in place, 'potentially effective against all forms of disease in all patients' (TB Alliance), and a similar pipeline of TB vaccines in various stages of clinical trials, it is only imperative to devise point-of-care diagnostic methods, which are not only sensitive and specific but also time-effective and cost-effective. This Symposium provides an opportunity to take stock of deliverables in the area of TB diagnostics against the backdrop of advances made in the basic biology of the disease. I hope that this meeting offers a platform for national and global policy-makers, academia, industry and funding agencies to come together and take stock of the current status of TB diagnostics and find ways for translating research results into reliable point-of-care methods for diagnosis, and to develop more robust strategies for epidemiology studies. At this juncture, India being home to the largest number of TB patients in the world, presents a challenge and an opportunity to emerge as a global leader in the area of TB diagnostics" added Dr Sharma.
The ITBS 2010 Symposium will provide a platform for these deliberations in the following scientific sessions:
- Pathophysiology of Tuberculosis and the Challenge of Diagnosis
- Trailing the Bug: TB Diagnostics Today & Tomorrow
- Changing the Landscape of TB Diagnostics in India
- Diagnostics Innovations from India: View from Industry and Clinic
- Diagnostics Innovations in India: Enablers and Barriers
Bobby Ramakant - CNS
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Where there are no drugs: TB-HIV dilemma for migrants
In late October 2010, a large group of people living in and around Mae Sot, Tak province were closing in on a terrible 'milestone' of sorts: all of them – over 60 migrant children, women and men – were living with HIV and taking antiretroviral (ARV) drugs, which they needed to stay alive. Some were also co-infected with tuberculosis (TB), the most frequent opportunistic infection (OI) experienced by people living with HIV/AIDS (PLHIV). Read more
Each group member's daily regimen of drugs – a one-year 'buffer' provided by an international non-governmental organization (INGO) pulling its operations out of the country – was about to run out, with no new supplier in sight.
"We have been unable to secure a sustainable source of ARVs for our patients," explains a staff of the Mae Tao Clinic, a clinic providing health care services to migrants and displaced people near the Thai-Burma border. "If they stop taking their medication, we face a crisis."
DRUG RESISTANCE
--------------
Adherence to a prescribed ARV drug regimen is essential; people living with HIV and/or TB who stop taking medication for whatever reason, and even only for a few days, can develop a resistance. Drug-resistance is dangerous, because it is irreversible and the new strains of the disease can be passed on to others.
Multi-drug- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (or, respectively, MDR and XDR TB) is an even greater potential threat than HIV drug resistance in terms of impact, because unlike HIV – a blood-borne disease –, TB is transmitted from person to person through the air. A rampant increase in drug resistance can thus indeed fuel a public health crisis.
The Mae Tao Clinic representative said that "from a public health perspective TB is more difficult to handle, mainly because of time-related compliance issues. People with TB have to take medication daily for six months. If they interrupt this treatment, which happens frequently with migrants who are on the move and may stop taking drugs when they feel better, then drug resistance can occur."
Another often under-estimated problem accompanying drug resistance is the subsequent need for different drugs to replace the first regimen. These second- or third-line drugs are much more expensive and difficult to procure – here in Thailand, for example, the main first-line ARV combination therapy (for example GPO-VIR S30) is locally produced and distributed, bringing down the cost; but second- or third-line drugs must be imported, tend to be much more expensive than first-line medicine and may require special handling, like refrigeration, which complicates delivery in unstable settings.
MIGRANTS MARGINALISED
--------------
Thais living with HIV have the right to, and usually receive, free ARVs through the National Access to Antiretroviral Program for People living with HIV/AIDS, or NAPHA. People without a Thai ID can buy ARVs for a minimum of 1,350 baht per month, although NAPHA set up a provisional extension programme to cover vulnerable populations who do not have access via regular channels like Thai social welfare card holders.
Access is inevitably restricted for individuals or families already subject to the most dire of circumstances: many migrants and displaced people along the Thai-Burma border live a day-to-day existence that may include a lack of food security and reliable shelter. This can, and does frequently lead to greater vulnerability to infection and illness. An HIV positive migrant in poor health is thus more likely to contract opportunistic infections (OI) like TB, or Hepatitis C, another highly problematic OI.
A representative of a community-based organization in northern Thailand shared that "along the Thai-Burma border abutting Shan State, in Chiang Mai province, we support 125 members of the Shan community living with HIV, of whom 50 currently receive free ARVs. Unfortunately, beginning in December 2010, any new patients will have to pay for treatment – so this will affect any of the 75 not yet on ARVs who might need them in the future." There are about one or two new cases every month, and some of them also have TB.
She added that they "…have a limited budget aimed at helping with general hospital costs for community members, but we've been using it to cover ARV-related costs for our PLHIV."
Given the existing obstacles to accessing adequate and appropriate treatment, it is not surprising that migrants may start with the TB six-month short course, but then, despite doctor's instructions, stop taking the drugs once they feel better. Many migrants are by nature already mobile, which further complicates consistent compliance and follow up by medical staff.
It is this population – in addition to other key populations like sex workers, injecting drug users and prisoners – that should be the main beneficiary of effective prevention efforts and increased access to a regular supply of drugs.
In a country that currently receives generous funding from the Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria (GFATM), how is it possible we cannot manage to take care of our most vulnerable fellow humans?
SERVICES AND GAPS
--------------
A representative of the Thai Northern Network of People Living with HIV stated that "local hospitals do provide ARVs to migrants and displaced people as part of NAPHA's extension programme, but they are bound by a quota system which always favours Thai citizens over unregistered migrants."
He admitted that "sometimes Thais who fear being stigmatized and discriminated against by colleagues will request treatment under the extension programme instead of the regular system, because this way they can remain anonymous."
Mae Tao Clinic already offers a number of relevant services for PLHIV, including voluntary counseling and testing (VCT), home-based care and peer educators. Relatively simple preventive approaches can also be applied in the context of TB-related services, such as face-masks and better ventilation in places where people go to get tested.
"A more systematic, consistent integration of HIV and TB programmes is key," claimed another Mae Tao Clinic staff; he went on to say that "since it was at this point beyond the clinic's capacity to offer TB treatment, it was essential to have one group or entity able to take full responsibility for managing a comprehensive TB programme and willing to deal with problems such as non-compliance or adherence due to mobility."
There is an international NGO currently providing TB services in Mae Sot, serving part of the area previously covered by the INGO that pulled out last year. Yet the new organisation has limited reach and cannot accept patients outside of its focal communities, including those likely to move across the border. These unfortunate ones have to look elsewhere, and more often than not, they end up at Mae Tao Clinic.
Regarding the 'stranded' HIV-positive people, clinic staff approached the closest hospitals for help, and only Propha agreed to treat 20 people under its NAPHA extension scheme. Mae Sot, Mae Sariang and Mae Ramat hospitals were not accepting any new patients.
"We are now waiting to hear whether the Regional NAPHA Extension Unit in Pitsanuloke can help coordinate the provision of ARVs directly to Mae Tao," said the first Mae Tao Clinic staff. "This is easier and more cost-effective than transporting a large group of patients back and forth each month."
WHAT NOW?
--------------
It seems that drug resistance is here to stay – at least for now – and so the best response would include not only addressing the most immediate needs to mitigate impact, but also introducing some longer-term measures.
In addition to the interventions mentioned above, anti-stigma and -discrimination campaigns targeting Thai society would help PLHIV at all levels access existing ARV providers without fear of being socially outcast.
The representative of the Northern Network of People Living with HIV wondered whether "everything could be related to national security issues and that maybe there is no real will to find a sustainable solution to these urgent cross-border issues."
Also, "there seems to be little real interest among TB service providers to collaborate more with the HIV/AIDS sector," an independent consultant supporting HIV/AIDS-related work at national and local levels in Thailand noted. "Because TB has for so long been considered 'solved' as a public health issue here, they do not have a sense of urgency…"
Well, it can't get any more urgent for those people living with HIV/AIDS and TB here, and now - and who may soon become drug resistant due to apathy and ineffective programme design and interventions. Acknowledging and fully understanding the reality of this is the first step, acting decisively and comprehensively, the second. Here, and now.
Constanze Ruprecht
(The author has worked in international development cooperation since 2000. Focusing on a broad range of areas including public health, gender, advocacy and communications, politics and the environment, she supports people and programmes in Asia, Africa and Europe.)
Published in:
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka/Thailand
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Banderas News, Mexico
Elites TV News, USA
Relief Web News, USA
All Voices News, India
Localspur News, Thailand
Bihar and Jharkhand News Service (BJNS)
All Headlines News, India
Asia Sentinel News
Indy Post News, India
The Invisible News Report, Thailand
Bioportfolio.com
Healthinsurance.com
Humanitariannews.org
Directory of Naperville
PVwriter.com
Drugpolicycenter.com
Regator.com
Friendfeed.com
Each group member's daily regimen of drugs – a one-year 'buffer' provided by an international non-governmental organization (INGO) pulling its operations out of the country – was about to run out, with no new supplier in sight.
"We have been unable to secure a sustainable source of ARVs for our patients," explains a staff of the Mae Tao Clinic, a clinic providing health care services to migrants and displaced people near the Thai-Burma border. "If they stop taking their medication, we face a crisis."
DRUG RESISTANCE
--------------
Adherence to a prescribed ARV drug regimen is essential; people living with HIV and/or TB who stop taking medication for whatever reason, and even only for a few days, can develop a resistance. Drug-resistance is dangerous, because it is irreversible and the new strains of the disease can be passed on to others.
Multi-drug- and extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (or, respectively, MDR and XDR TB) is an even greater potential threat than HIV drug resistance in terms of impact, because unlike HIV – a blood-borne disease –, TB is transmitted from person to person through the air. A rampant increase in drug resistance can thus indeed fuel a public health crisis.
The Mae Tao Clinic representative said that "from a public health perspective TB is more difficult to handle, mainly because of time-related compliance issues. People with TB have to take medication daily for six months. If they interrupt this treatment, which happens frequently with migrants who are on the move and may stop taking drugs when they feel better, then drug resistance can occur."
Another often under-estimated problem accompanying drug resistance is the subsequent need for different drugs to replace the first regimen. These second- or third-line drugs are much more expensive and difficult to procure – here in Thailand, for example, the main first-line ARV combination therapy (for example GPO-VIR S30) is locally produced and distributed, bringing down the cost; but second- or third-line drugs must be imported, tend to be much more expensive than first-line medicine and may require special handling, like refrigeration, which complicates delivery in unstable settings.
MIGRANTS MARGINALISED
--------------
Thais living with HIV have the right to, and usually receive, free ARVs through the National Access to Antiretroviral Program for People living with HIV/AIDS, or NAPHA. People without a Thai ID can buy ARVs for a minimum of 1,350 baht per month, although NAPHA set up a provisional extension programme to cover vulnerable populations who do not have access via regular channels like Thai social welfare card holders.
Access is inevitably restricted for individuals or families already subject to the most dire of circumstances: many migrants and displaced people along the Thai-Burma border live a day-to-day existence that may include a lack of food security and reliable shelter. This can, and does frequently lead to greater vulnerability to infection and illness. An HIV positive migrant in poor health is thus more likely to contract opportunistic infections (OI) like TB, or Hepatitis C, another highly problematic OI.
A representative of a community-based organization in northern Thailand shared that "along the Thai-Burma border abutting Shan State, in Chiang Mai province, we support 125 members of the Shan community living with HIV, of whom 50 currently receive free ARVs. Unfortunately, beginning in December 2010, any new patients will have to pay for treatment – so this will affect any of the 75 not yet on ARVs who might need them in the future." There are about one or two new cases every month, and some of them also have TB.
She added that they "…have a limited budget aimed at helping with general hospital costs for community members, but we've been using it to cover ARV-related costs for our PLHIV."
Given the existing obstacles to accessing adequate and appropriate treatment, it is not surprising that migrants may start with the TB six-month short course, but then, despite doctor's instructions, stop taking the drugs once they feel better. Many migrants are by nature already mobile, which further complicates consistent compliance and follow up by medical staff.
It is this population – in addition to other key populations like sex workers, injecting drug users and prisoners – that should be the main beneficiary of effective prevention efforts and increased access to a regular supply of drugs.
In a country that currently receives generous funding from the Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria (GFATM), how is it possible we cannot manage to take care of our most vulnerable fellow humans?
SERVICES AND GAPS
--------------
A representative of the Thai Northern Network of People Living with HIV stated that "local hospitals do provide ARVs to migrants and displaced people as part of NAPHA's extension programme, but they are bound by a quota system which always favours Thai citizens over unregistered migrants."
He admitted that "sometimes Thais who fear being stigmatized and discriminated against by colleagues will request treatment under the extension programme instead of the regular system, because this way they can remain anonymous."
Mae Tao Clinic already offers a number of relevant services for PLHIV, including voluntary counseling and testing (VCT), home-based care and peer educators. Relatively simple preventive approaches can also be applied in the context of TB-related services, such as face-masks and better ventilation in places where people go to get tested.
"A more systematic, consistent integration of HIV and TB programmes is key," claimed another Mae Tao Clinic staff; he went on to say that "since it was at this point beyond the clinic's capacity to offer TB treatment, it was essential to have one group or entity able to take full responsibility for managing a comprehensive TB programme and willing to deal with problems such as non-compliance or adherence due to mobility."
There is an international NGO currently providing TB services in Mae Sot, serving part of the area previously covered by the INGO that pulled out last year. Yet the new organisation has limited reach and cannot accept patients outside of its focal communities, including those likely to move across the border. These unfortunate ones have to look elsewhere, and more often than not, they end up at Mae Tao Clinic.
Regarding the 'stranded' HIV-positive people, clinic staff approached the closest hospitals for help, and only Propha agreed to treat 20 people under its NAPHA extension scheme. Mae Sot, Mae Sariang and Mae Ramat hospitals were not accepting any new patients.
"We are now waiting to hear whether the Regional NAPHA Extension Unit in Pitsanuloke can help coordinate the provision of ARVs directly to Mae Tao," said the first Mae Tao Clinic staff. "This is easier and more cost-effective than transporting a large group of patients back and forth each month."
WHAT NOW?
--------------
It seems that drug resistance is here to stay – at least for now – and so the best response would include not only addressing the most immediate needs to mitigate impact, but also introducing some longer-term measures.
In addition to the interventions mentioned above, anti-stigma and -discrimination campaigns targeting Thai society would help PLHIV at all levels access existing ARV providers without fear of being socially outcast.
The representative of the Northern Network of People Living with HIV wondered whether "everything could be related to national security issues and that maybe there is no real will to find a sustainable solution to these urgent cross-border issues."
Also, "there seems to be little real interest among TB service providers to collaborate more with the HIV/AIDS sector," an independent consultant supporting HIV/AIDS-related work at national and local levels in Thailand noted. "Because TB has for so long been considered 'solved' as a public health issue here, they do not have a sense of urgency…"
Well, it can't get any more urgent for those people living with HIV/AIDS and TB here, and now - and who may soon become drug resistant due to apathy and ineffective programme design and interventions. Acknowledging and fully understanding the reality of this is the first step, acting decisively and comprehensively, the second. Here, and now.
Constanze Ruprecht
(The author has worked in international development cooperation since 2000. Focusing on a broad range of areas including public health, gender, advocacy and communications, politics and the environment, she supports people and programmes in Asia, Africa and Europe.)
Published in:
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka/Thailand
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Banderas News, Mexico
Elites TV News, USA
Relief Web News, USA
All Voices News, India
Localspur News, Thailand
Bihar and Jharkhand News Service (BJNS)
All Headlines News, India
Asia Sentinel News
Indy Post News, India
The Invisible News Report, Thailand
Bioportfolio.com
Healthinsurance.com
Humanitariannews.org
Directory of Naperville
PVwriter.com
Drugpolicycenter.com
Regator.com
Friendfeed.com
Monday, December 6, 2010
Breaking silos: Tuberculosis (TB) and poverty
Tuberculosis (TB) continues to affect society's most vulnerable - those who live in abject poverty, are marginalized or economically and socially isolated. The poor and vulnerable people are much more likely to suffer from TB due to socioeconomic factors. The poor face significant costs and delays in accessing TB services and treatment outcomes are more likely to be adverse, said Rachael Thomson from Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM) who was nominated by the TB and poverty sub-working group of Stop TB Partnership to speak at the Biennial Conference of Irish Forum for Global Health (IFGH) held in Maynooth, Ireland (29-30 November 2010). The IFGH meet was organized by IFGH with support from Combat Diseases of Poverty Consortium (CDPC), Irish Aid and National University of Ireland Maynooth (NUIM). Read more
"In urban Malawi poorer patients face costs six times their monthly income to access a diagnosis from 'free' facilities, and in rural Malawi this cost rises to ten times" said Rachael.
New TB case detection in many countries is low because the poor people are least likely to access TB care services. The process of accessing care is impoverishing making the people accessing care even poorer, said Rachael.
The lack of adequate diagnosis, treatment and cure means the burden of TB in poorer communities continues to increase.
Not surprisingly, the poor people have higher risk of infection, higher prevalence of disease and worse outcome of disease too. Moreover the poor people have greater health care needs, said Rachael.
Social and economic determinants at individual, household and community levels affect a person's vulnerability to TB.
Special situations such as massive population movements - the displacement of people and refugee flows - and living or working in vulnerable conditions also increase the risk of a person contracting TB. In developed countries, ethnic minorities and other marginalized communities are at a greater risk of contracting the disease.
There is a need to combat TB by addressing the barriers faced due to poverty such as infrastructural, housing, employment, educational and nutritional deficiencies.
Rachael explained that poverty is more than economic poverty (living on less than USD 1.25 per day) and encompasses lack of opportunities, voice and representation, and is a major determinant of vulnerability to disease - especially TB.
One of the major steps forward in addressing poverty and TB will be to put health on the poverty agenda and poverty on the health agenda, said Rachael.
Rachael gave an overview of the TB and poverty sub-group of the Stop TB Partnership. TB and poverty is the sub-group of the DOTS Expansion Working Group (DEWG) of the Stop TB Partnership and is a network of individuals and organisations interested in the needs of poor and vulnerable populations with respect to TB. Since September 2010, the secretariat of the TB and Poverty sub-working group of the Stop TB Partnership is housed in the south-east Asia regional office of The Union in New Delhi, India.
A two-days consultative workshop of the TB and poverty sub-working group was also held in Gurgaon, India on 29-30 October 2010 which brought together the national TB programme managers from India, Nepal and Thailand, state TB officers from eight poorest states of India, and partners from various other organizations like WHO, the World Bank, World Vision, GFATM Round 9 members, media (CNS, Asia Tribune), National Partnership for TB care and control in India among others, said Rachael.
"In urban Malawi poorer patients face costs six times their monthly income to access a diagnosis from 'free' facilities, and in rural Malawi this cost rises to ten times" said Rachael.
New TB case detection in many countries is low because the poor people are least likely to access TB care services. The process of accessing care is impoverishing making the people accessing care even poorer, said Rachael.
The lack of adequate diagnosis, treatment and cure means the burden of TB in poorer communities continues to increase.
Not surprisingly, the poor people have higher risk of infection, higher prevalence of disease and worse outcome of disease too. Moreover the poor people have greater health care needs, said Rachael.
Social and economic determinants at individual, household and community levels affect a person's vulnerability to TB.
Special situations such as massive population movements - the displacement of people and refugee flows - and living or working in vulnerable conditions also increase the risk of a person contracting TB. In developed countries, ethnic minorities and other marginalized communities are at a greater risk of contracting the disease.
There is a need to combat TB by addressing the barriers faced due to poverty such as infrastructural, housing, employment, educational and nutritional deficiencies.
Rachael explained that poverty is more than economic poverty (living on less than USD 1.25 per day) and encompasses lack of opportunities, voice and representation, and is a major determinant of vulnerability to disease - especially TB.
One of the major steps forward in addressing poverty and TB will be to put health on the poverty agenda and poverty on the health agenda, said Rachael.
Rachael gave an overview of the TB and poverty sub-group of the Stop TB Partnership. TB and poverty is the sub-group of the DOTS Expansion Working Group (DEWG) of the Stop TB Partnership and is a network of individuals and organisations interested in the needs of poor and vulnerable populations with respect to TB. Since September 2010, the secretariat of the TB and Poverty sub-working group of the Stop TB Partnership is housed in the south-east Asia regional office of The Union in New Delhi, India.
A two-days consultative workshop of the TB and poverty sub-working group was also held in Gurgaon, India on 29-30 October 2010 which brought together the national TB programme managers from India, Nepal and Thailand, state TB officers from eight poorest states of India, and partners from various other organizations like WHO, the World Bank, World Vision, GFATM Round 9 members, media (CNS, Asia Tribune), National Partnership for TB care and control in India among others, said Rachael.
Bobby Ramakant - CNS/ member on-site IFGH Key Correspondent team
Published in:
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka/Thailand
Pakistan Christian Post, Karachi, Pakistan
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
American Chronicle, USA
The Nigerian Voice, Nigeria
Elites TV News, USA
Humanitarian News, Malawi
Banderas News, Mexico
Now Public News, India
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Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
American Chronicle, USA
The Nigerian Voice, Nigeria
Elites TV News, USA
Humanitarian News, Malawi
Banderas News, Mexico
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Saturday, December 4, 2010
Private-private partnership delivers affordable eye care
An Irish non-profit, Right to Sight (RTS), partnered with a NGO – Lions Aravinda Institute of Community Ophthalmology (LAICO) and a private-for-profit company, Shalina, to deliver quality, affordable and sustainable eye care in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), shared Keerti Bhusan Pradhan, who was speaking at the Biennial Conference of Irish Forum for Global Health (IFGH) in Maynooth, Ireland (29-30 November 2010). This meet is being organized by IFGH with support from Irish Aid, National University of Ireland Maynooth (NUIM) and Combat Diseases of Poverty Consortium (CDPC). Read more
Right to Sight (RTS) had raised USD 200,000 to jump start this private-private partnership (PPP) model based initiative which eventually mobilized more than USD 1.5 million from a private company and a range of other contributions and expertise to make the eye care service sustainable and affordable in a long run in DRC, said Keerti during his interaction at the Health Systems and Services (HSS) parallel session at the IFGH meet.
These three private partners got together to establish an eye-care health centre in Katanga, DRC which began operations in 2007. There was a considerably small user charge for people accessing eye care services from this centre to meet operational costs and make the initiative sustainable. “By end of first year (2007-08), this eye care health centre broke-even by meeting the operational expenses,” said Keerti. More than 35,000 outpatients were seen and 2000 surgeries conducted in the first year of operations at this centre.
Another important aspect of this initiative that needs a mention is that it had built capacities and competencies of local healthcare providers in DRC to run this eye care centre. The expat-to-local human resource ratio has been 1:6 with 5 expats to 30 DRC citizens who are part of the team at this centre and considerable knowledge transfer and sharing of skills take place between them, said Keerti.
RTS worked with the Aravinda Eye Care System (AECS) which is the largest eye care provider in the world with a renowned service delivery model, a facility for manufacturing high quality ophthalmic products at low cost - Aurolab and an institute for teaching and training – Lions Aravinda Institute of Community Ophthalmology (LAICO). They brought in another partner, Shalina Laboratories, a pharmaceutical company in DRC, to support this initiative through corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives. And that is how the eye care health service centre was built and started functioning towards end of 2007, said Keerti.
The DRC-based private-for-profit partner of this initiative, Shalina, plans to expand this private-private partnership model of eye care delivery to 18 African countries with six centres planned in DRC as well, said Keerti.
Although not connected directly to eye-care health services, yet in terms of similarity between the partnership approaches, it will be worthwhile to mention that a participant from Irish Aid said a similar project is also taking place in Tanzania on addressing issues related to disability.
These examples of private-private partnerships give hope – particularly to countries like India and Cambodia for example - where the first clinic most of the population visits with initial symptoms is most likely to be in private sector. If people can access quality healthcare without delay it is likely to have a very positive outcome on public health. In same HSS session at IFGH meet, another speaker Una Lynch from Queen’s University, Belfast, shared how strengthening primary healthcare services in Cuba had such pronounced positive outcomes in terms of public health.
Right to Sight (RTS) had raised USD 200,000 to jump start this private-private partnership (PPP) model based initiative which eventually mobilized more than USD 1.5 million from a private company and a range of other contributions and expertise to make the eye care service sustainable and affordable in a long run in DRC, said Keerti during his interaction at the Health Systems and Services (HSS) parallel session at the IFGH meet.
These three private partners got together to establish an eye-care health centre in Katanga, DRC which began operations in 2007. There was a considerably small user charge for people accessing eye care services from this centre to meet operational costs and make the initiative sustainable. “By end of first year (2007-08), this eye care health centre broke-even by meeting the operational expenses,” said Keerti. More than 35,000 outpatients were seen and 2000 surgeries conducted in the first year of operations at this centre.
Another important aspect of this initiative that needs a mention is that it had built capacities and competencies of local healthcare providers in DRC to run this eye care centre. The expat-to-local human resource ratio has been 1:6 with 5 expats to 30 DRC citizens who are part of the team at this centre and considerable knowledge transfer and sharing of skills take place between them, said Keerti.
RTS worked with the Aravinda Eye Care System (AECS) which is the largest eye care provider in the world with a renowned service delivery model, a facility for manufacturing high quality ophthalmic products at low cost - Aurolab and an institute for teaching and training – Lions Aravinda Institute of Community Ophthalmology (LAICO). They brought in another partner, Shalina Laboratories, a pharmaceutical company in DRC, to support this initiative through corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives. And that is how the eye care health service centre was built and started functioning towards end of 2007, said Keerti.
The DRC-based private-for-profit partner of this initiative, Shalina, plans to expand this private-private partnership model of eye care delivery to 18 African countries with six centres planned in DRC as well, said Keerti.
Although not connected directly to eye-care health services, yet in terms of similarity between the partnership approaches, it will be worthwhile to mention that a participant from Irish Aid said a similar project is also taking place in Tanzania on addressing issues related to disability.
These examples of private-private partnerships give hope – particularly to countries like India and Cambodia for example - where the first clinic most of the population visits with initial symptoms is most likely to be in private sector. If people can access quality healthcare without delay it is likely to have a very positive outcome on public health. In same HSS session at IFGH meet, another speaker Una Lynch from Queen’s University, Belfast, shared how strengthening primary healthcare services in Cuba had such pronounced positive outcomes in terms of public health.
Bobby Ramakant - CNS/ Key Correspondent at IFGH
Published in:
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Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
Elites TV News, USA
Topix News, India
Celebrifi.com
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Wikionews.com, UK
Care2.com
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Care2.com
Friday, November 26, 2010
Right To Sight (RTS) committed to eliminate avoidable blindness
Three-quarters of all blindness can be prevented or treated. Avoidable blindness poses an enormous challenge to healthcare system, particularly in low- and middle- income countries. There are nine million people in Africa alone with preventable blindness, out of which 50-75% people are blind due to cataract and 5% due to glaucoma, says Keerti Bhusan Pradhan (Right To Sight) who is heading to Ireland to present his work in Africa at the Irish Forum for Global Health (IFGH) biennial conference next week (29-30 November 2010). Read more
Although blindness in 50-75% people is attributed to cataract, the health response has been appalling. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), cataract surgery is one of the most cost-effective treatments that can be offered in developing countries. It can allow people to increase their economic productivity by up to 1500% of the cost of the surgery during the first post-operative year.
According to WHO, about 314 million people are visually impaired worldwide, 45 million of them are blind. Most people with visual impairment are older, and females are more at risk at every age, in every part of the world. About 87% of the world's visually impaired live in developing countries.
The leading causes of chronic blindness include cataract, glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration, corneal opacities, diabetic retinopathy, trachoma, and eye conditions in children (including those caused by vitamin A deficiency). Age-related blindness is increasing throughout the world, as is blindness due to uncontrolled diabetes. Three-quarters of all blindness can be prevented or treated.
Keerti represents the Right To Sight (RTS) which is dedicated to eradicate preventable blindness through the use of proven techniques in cost recovery, training and surgical practice. One of the major landmarks of Keerti is his contribution to improving eye care and preventing avoidable blindness in India as well as many countries in Africa.
Investing in preventing avoidable blindness is not only a public health imperative but also a smart investment as it saves costs for countries and donors, says Keerti. According to a research done by Frick and Foster, the estimated cost of global blindness and low vision was USD 42 billion in 2000. Without a decrease in the prevalence of blindness and low vision, it was projected that the total annual costs would rise to USD 110 billion by 2020. However, if avoidable blindness is eliminated, this projected cost will be reduced to only USD 57 billion in 2020, says Keerti.
There are many challenges to initiatives that aim to eliminate avoidable blindness and two major ones are inconsistent quality of care and shortage of healthcare workers in Africa, says Keerti.
One of the novel approaches Right To Sight brings in is using private public partnership (PPP) to engage private sector in public health. Most of the healthcare in sub-Saharan Africa is in public sector and Keerti envisions a growing role of private sector in meeting public health needs in the region. According to a research study, USD 20 billion of additional investment is needed for healthcare in private sector to improve health outcomes in Africa.
Keerti believes that operational ownership of eye hospitals by the private sector partners is vital. Right To Sight, a non-profit, works in partnership with Shalina Laboratories which is a pharmaceutical company in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Shalina plans to expand Right To Sight's PPP model of eye care delivery to 18 African countries with six centres planned in DRC in phases.
This pilot would provide road map for many private partnerships to have eye care services in Africa leading towards the goal of eliminating avoidable blindness by 2020 says Keerti.
Preventing avoidable blindness mandates a stronger response at all levels and from all stakeholders. Let's hope that the forthcoming biennial conference of Irish Forum for Global Health (IFGH) next week will be a game changer for evoking the warranted response to eliminate avoidable blindness.
Bobby Ramakant - CNS
Published in:
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
Pakistan Christian Post, Karachi, Pakistan
Asia Sentinel, Sri Lanka/Thailand
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka/Thailand
South Asia Mail, Thailand
Banderas News, Mexico
Elites TV News, USA
American Chronicle, USA
Media For Freedom, Nepal
PV Writer News, India
All Voices News, India
Organized Wisdom
Healthdev.net
Reddit.com
Friendfeed.com
Although blindness in 50-75% people is attributed to cataract, the health response has been appalling. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), cataract surgery is one of the most cost-effective treatments that can be offered in developing countries. It can allow people to increase their economic productivity by up to 1500% of the cost of the surgery during the first post-operative year.
According to WHO, about 314 million people are visually impaired worldwide, 45 million of them are blind. Most people with visual impairment are older, and females are more at risk at every age, in every part of the world. About 87% of the world's visually impaired live in developing countries.
The leading causes of chronic blindness include cataract, glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration, corneal opacities, diabetic retinopathy, trachoma, and eye conditions in children (including those caused by vitamin A deficiency). Age-related blindness is increasing throughout the world, as is blindness due to uncontrolled diabetes. Three-quarters of all blindness can be prevented or treated.
Keerti represents the Right To Sight (RTS) which is dedicated to eradicate preventable blindness through the use of proven techniques in cost recovery, training and surgical practice. One of the major landmarks of Keerti is his contribution to improving eye care and preventing avoidable blindness in India as well as many countries in Africa.
Investing in preventing avoidable blindness is not only a public health imperative but also a smart investment as it saves costs for countries and donors, says Keerti. According to a research done by Frick and Foster, the estimated cost of global blindness and low vision was USD 42 billion in 2000. Without a decrease in the prevalence of blindness and low vision, it was projected that the total annual costs would rise to USD 110 billion by 2020. However, if avoidable blindness is eliminated, this projected cost will be reduced to only USD 57 billion in 2020, says Keerti.
There are many challenges to initiatives that aim to eliminate avoidable blindness and two major ones are inconsistent quality of care and shortage of healthcare workers in Africa, says Keerti.
One of the novel approaches Right To Sight brings in is using private public partnership (PPP) to engage private sector in public health. Most of the healthcare in sub-Saharan Africa is in public sector and Keerti envisions a growing role of private sector in meeting public health needs in the region. According to a research study, USD 20 billion of additional investment is needed for healthcare in private sector to improve health outcomes in Africa.
Keerti believes that operational ownership of eye hospitals by the private sector partners is vital. Right To Sight, a non-profit, works in partnership with Shalina Laboratories which is a pharmaceutical company in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Shalina plans to expand Right To Sight's PPP model of eye care delivery to 18 African countries with six centres planned in DRC in phases.
This pilot would provide road map for many private partnerships to have eye care services in Africa leading towards the goal of eliminating avoidable blindness by 2020 says Keerti.
Preventing avoidable blindness mandates a stronger response at all levels and from all stakeholders. Let's hope that the forthcoming biennial conference of Irish Forum for Global Health (IFGH) next week will be a game changer for evoking the warranted response to eliminate avoidable blindness.
Bobby Ramakant - CNS
Published in:
Modern Ghana News, Accra, Ghana
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
Pakistan Christian Post, Karachi, Pakistan
Asia Sentinel, Sri Lanka/Thailand
The Asian Tribune, Sri Lanka/Thailand
South Asia Mail, Thailand
Banderas News, Mexico
Elites TV News, USA
American Chronicle, USA
Media For Freedom, Nepal
PV Writer News, India
All Voices News, India
Organized Wisdom
Healthdev.net
Reddit.com
Friendfeed.com
An Integrated Health System Is What We Need
Health remains the most important goal in one’s life. All diseases need proper attention, though (one may argue) some need more attention than others. Our fight should not be directed merely against certain specific diseases, but to have a disease free and healthy mind and body. To achieve this, we will need to strengthen health systems and work towards the fair and equitable distribution of health care resources to all those who need them. Read more
Many developing countries have extremely weak public health systems. About 80% of India’s health care delivery system is through the private sector. This makes it even more complex to deal with it, because the role of primary health centres in community health is very crucial – whether we are dealing with non communicable diseases (NCDs) or communicable diseases (CDs).
The last few years have seen a tremendous increase in funding for some diseases like HIV/AIDS in comparison to the so called non sexy illnesses like tuberculosis, diabetes and acute respiratory infections (ARIs). According to the first ever Acute Respiratory Infections Atlas published very recently, ARIs are the third largest cause of mortality in the world and take twice the toll in lives lost, as compared to HIV. Still only about 1% ($32 million) of all pharmaceutical research/development funding was spent on research for ARIs in 2007 as compared to $1.1 billion spent on HIV related research. According to Peter Baldini, CEO, World Lung Foundation, "We know that at least four million people die from ARIs, yet the global health community does not even recognize them as a distinct disease group."
So despite being major killers, some diseases may receive a fraction of government and donor agency support, for various inexplicable reasons. This disproportionate funding should be viewed as a positive problem, according to Dr Anil Kapur, President, World Diabetes Foundation (WDF).
He says that "The past 20 years have witnessed a tremendous amount of health development systems emerging and we must compliment the world community to have come together to provide that sort of assistance. It started with the activism of HIV/AIDS, justifiably at the point of time where people felt the need of help, which was provided. We have thus built some systems to deal with the issue. Over a period of time we are learning that some actions we took to deal with different health problems (like HIV/TB, malaria, etc) might not have been appropriate. The debate about disproportionate funding in some health sectors has started to happen. I am positive that there will be more equity in the distribution of resources. The clear issue is that if money goes not only to provide drug treatment, but to improve health systems, then we can surely reap better benefits. Funding should be for health and local governments should be allowed to allocate funds according to specific needs."
It indeed is an artificial way of looking at health issues by compartmentalizing communicable and non communicable diseases. Dr Kapur rightly believes that the same public health principles apply to both. For example, if an index case of a communicable disease like tuberculosis is identified, we try to provide a protective environment, where people surrounding this person are tested so that infection does not spread. In diabetes too, when an index case is identified, the family members should be given appropriate advice as they share the same risk behaviour as the index case. Another example is the issue of HIV/AIDS. When patients are given anti retro viral treatment (ART), many of them may develop metabolic syndrome, over a period of time as part of side effects of the drugs. Should they not be treated for diabetes, which they develop as a side effect?
A mother on ART to prevent mother to child transmission, may develop gestational diabetes. And then we will not be able to separate the two issues. To me linking maternal health and prevention of future diabetes is a very relevant issue.
The whole field of foetal origins of adult diseases has come to the forefront as the first 1000 days of life since conception are very crucial in determining our future health. If a mother is undernourished, she will give birth to a small weight gestational baby. If this happens to be a girl child, she might develop gestational diabetes and/or other diseases later, and pass the risks to her offspring.
Hence maternal and child health forms the backbone of all health care systems. We need to integrate all these critical public health issues at the primary care level. TB, HIV/AIDS, diabetes are all becoming chronic diseases, and should not be compartmentalized. Dr Kapur feels that we should talk to each other and do not compartmentalize. It is time that organizations, agencies, and specialists reach out to each other and understand the problems of health care delivery. Then we can resolve the issue of equity and imbalance in resources.
We need to build public health systems where we are able to provide knowledge and information about relevant illnesses, in a given community, and use that to provide them basic curative services. This is the real challenge.

Shobha Shukla - CNS
(The author is the Editor of Citizen News Service (CNS) and also serves as the Director of CNS Diabetes Media Initiative (CNS-DMI). She has worked earlier with State Planning Institute, UP. She was supported by the Stop TB Partnership to write from the 41st Union World Conference on Lung Health, Berlin, Germany (11-15 November 2010). Email: shobha@citizen-news.org, website: www.citizen-news.org)
Published in:
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
Elites TV News, USA
News Blaze News, California, USA
Now Public News, India
One News Page, India
Keegy News, USA
Healthdev.net
Redditnews.com
Twitter.com
Many developing countries have extremely weak public health systems. About 80% of India’s health care delivery system is through the private sector. This makes it even more complex to deal with it, because the role of primary health centres in community health is very crucial – whether we are dealing with non communicable diseases (NCDs) or communicable diseases (CDs).
The last few years have seen a tremendous increase in funding for some diseases like HIV/AIDS in comparison to the so called non sexy illnesses like tuberculosis, diabetes and acute respiratory infections (ARIs). According to the first ever Acute Respiratory Infections Atlas published very recently, ARIs are the third largest cause of mortality in the world and take twice the toll in lives lost, as compared to HIV. Still only about 1% ($32 million) of all pharmaceutical research/development funding was spent on research for ARIs in 2007 as compared to $1.1 billion spent on HIV related research. According to Peter Baldini, CEO, World Lung Foundation, "We know that at least four million people die from ARIs, yet the global health community does not even recognize them as a distinct disease group."
So despite being major killers, some diseases may receive a fraction of government and donor agency support, for various inexplicable reasons. This disproportionate funding should be viewed as a positive problem, according to Dr Anil Kapur, President, World Diabetes Foundation (WDF).
He says that "The past 20 years have witnessed a tremendous amount of health development systems emerging and we must compliment the world community to have come together to provide that sort of assistance. It started with the activism of HIV/AIDS, justifiably at the point of time where people felt the need of help, which was provided. We have thus built some systems to deal with the issue. Over a period of time we are learning that some actions we took to deal with different health problems (like HIV/TB, malaria, etc) might not have been appropriate. The debate about disproportionate funding in some health sectors has started to happen. I am positive that there will be more equity in the distribution of resources. The clear issue is that if money goes not only to provide drug treatment, but to improve health systems, then we can surely reap better benefits. Funding should be for health and local governments should be allowed to allocate funds according to specific needs."
It indeed is an artificial way of looking at health issues by compartmentalizing communicable and non communicable diseases. Dr Kapur rightly believes that the same public health principles apply to both. For example, if an index case of a communicable disease like tuberculosis is identified, we try to provide a protective environment, where people surrounding this person are tested so that infection does not spread. In diabetes too, when an index case is identified, the family members should be given appropriate advice as they share the same risk behaviour as the index case. Another example is the issue of HIV/AIDS. When patients are given anti retro viral treatment (ART), many of them may develop metabolic syndrome, over a period of time as part of side effects of the drugs. Should they not be treated for diabetes, which they develop as a side effect?
A mother on ART to prevent mother to child transmission, may develop gestational diabetes. And then we will not be able to separate the two issues. To me linking maternal health and prevention of future diabetes is a very relevant issue.
The whole field of foetal origins of adult diseases has come to the forefront as the first 1000 days of life since conception are very crucial in determining our future health. If a mother is undernourished, she will give birth to a small weight gestational baby. If this happens to be a girl child, she might develop gestational diabetes and/or other diseases later, and pass the risks to her offspring.
Hence maternal and child health forms the backbone of all health care systems. We need to integrate all these critical public health issues at the primary care level. TB, HIV/AIDS, diabetes are all becoming chronic diseases, and should not be compartmentalized. Dr Kapur feels that we should talk to each other and do not compartmentalize. It is time that organizations, agencies, and specialists reach out to each other and understand the problems of health care delivery. Then we can resolve the issue of equity and imbalance in resources.
We need to build public health systems where we are able to provide knowledge and information about relevant illnesses, in a given community, and use that to provide them basic curative services. This is the real challenge.
Shobha Shukla - CNS
(The author is the Editor of Citizen News Service (CNS) and also serves as the Director of CNS Diabetes Media Initiative (CNS-DMI). She has worked earlier with State Planning Institute, UP. She was supported by the Stop TB Partnership to write from the 41st Union World Conference on Lung Health, Berlin, Germany (11-15 November 2010). Email: shobha@citizen-news.org, website: www.citizen-news.org)
Published in:
Citizen News Service (CNS), India/Thailand
Elites TV News, USA
News Blaze News, California, USA
Now Public News, India
One News Page, India
Keegy News, USA
Healthdev.net
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