Showing posts with label TUBERCULOSIS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TUBERCULOSIS. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Tuberculosis Matters- Private Doctors On Call !!! Fight Against TB- The World Has To Follow.






   At a call centre in Gurgaon, Haryana, there is an air of urgency. Calls are coming in from private practitioners and chemists in Gujarat. There are patient details to be noted, voucher numbers to be generated. Its all part of an innovative government programme to control TB in Gujarat's Mehsana district.


Over 800 kms away, in Kokas village, Mehsana district, the village pujari is making a slow but steady recovery. 60-year-old Bhagwangiri has multi-drug resistant TB, that has a high mortality rate.  

"We call this 'bad TB' in Gujarati. So the usual anti TB medicines will not have any effect on him. His medicines will have to be changed," says Bhrat Sagar, Senior TB Treatment Supervisor at the Mehsana District TB centre.



Multi drug resistant TB which continues to emerge and spread and is posing to be a major public health challenge.

This is Bhagwangiri's second encounter with TB. He was not cured the first time round because he stopped taking his medicines.

"I felt fine so I stopped the medicines. I also stopped going to the doctor," says he.

Last year he developed a severe cough. He visited two private doctors, but they failed to make a correct diagnosis.

According to him, they did not suspect TB. "They would prescribe medicines and take money. And when the cough started again, they would start the medicines again."

Bhagwangiri is typical of patients who do not understand the importance of completing their treatment. 10 years ago, he had got TB but failed to finish his six month course of treatment. Then late last year, he once again got TB and  this time a multi-drug resistant form that  requires a 24 month course of treatment


Multi drug resistant TB does not respond to two most powerful anti TB drugs. While it can be cured with long treatments of second line drugs, these drugs are a hundred times more expensive.

To control drug-resistant TB, the government has to ensure that every patient gets the right treatment and the treatment is sustained and not interrupted midway.

Take 20 year old Anil who is a daily wage labour and earns about Rs. 150 a day.

He got TB and was being treated by a private practitioner. He did not continue because he could not afford the medicines. Anil said, "He charged about Rs. 1,600 for his fees and 15 days of medicine."

In Akhaj village, we meet a 35 year old shopkeeper who has HIV co infection with TB, another serious challenge. In 2013, it is estimated that 38,000 people who had both HIV and TB lost their lives.

One out of every four TB patient in the world is in India. And at least half of those are being managed treated by private doctors. To control TB, private doctors have to be helped and supported to be effective.


In August last year the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare and the Central TB Division launched a pilot project in Mehsana to provide free anti TB drugs to patients who go to private health facilities the same way patients who go to government facilities are given. This two year project is funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

But before it did that, it had to resolve an important difference in the approach of Government doctors and private doctors. While government doctors prescribe TB drugs for alternate days, that is an intermittent regimen,  private doctors prescribe a daily regimen of TB drugs.

The project decided to support the daily regimen.

Dr Javedahmed A Shaikh, Private practitioner, Mehsana, explains, "We prefer daily therapy particularly if the patient has diabetes, if a patient has got HIV, if a patient has got chronic renal disease, if he is on steroid therapy or if he has got cancer or if the disease is extensive".

Dr Shaikh, a leading doctor in Mehsana with a busy private practice, is part of the pilot project.

The project began with the mapping of private doctors and chemists in the district and holding sensitisation meetings with them. Standard operating procedures and a masterlist of drugs were prepared in consultation with them.


Under the project, whenever a patient is diagnosed with TB, the private doctor contacts a call centre, giving full prescription details and patient profiles. The call centre generates a unique voucher number which is given to the doctor, who writes the number on the prescription.  

At the chemist shop, this man is collecting medicines for his mother who has TB.

The chemist calls the call centre. The voucher number on her prescription is validated and the patient is given free drugs for a month at a time.

According to Dr. Harish Patel, a private practitioner in Mehsana, "The patients are happy as the drug is free for them. We call the Delhi call centre. We only have to spend a few minutes on the call. Once the voucher number is generated and then we send the patient to the pharmacy."

Once the drugs are provided, the call centre contacts the patient for confirmation of receipt of free medicine.

One of the pilot project's biggest successes is the fact that it engages with private practitioners effectively to control TB. Nearly 50% of the private practitioners who treat TB patients are already linked to the projects and those who have come on board have stayed.

Thakur Prahlad Chand Virjee, a TB patient, tells us that he went to a private doctor because he was afraid of the long queues at a government hospital. He could not take a day off from work.

"I went to the doctor when I started spitting blood. The good thing is I can get my medicines from the neighbourhood chemist and its free. There has not been any difficulty so far. Supervisor from the government's TB centre have been to my home. Now I even get messages on my phone", says he.

Adds Dr Shaikh, "Treatment given by the Government hospitals are equally good but patients have some misconceptions. When we refer them to civil hospital, they don't go. They are lost in the community. If they don't get treatment, they will spread infection. So instead of that we are giving treatment and this treatment is made free of cost by our Government. Patients are also satisfied that they are consulting private doctors."

Eighty chemists are part of the project and they say they find the system efficient.

Khushboo Patel, a chemist in Mehsana, said, " After the patient brings the prescription to us, we call the TB call centre. We get our pharmacy ID checked. They know which chemist is calling them.  And then they check the medicines."

Govind Patel of Alsife medical store has been part of the project for 5 months. Three hundred and forty TB patients have been to his store for medicines during this period.

He said," Patients will benefit, that too those who are poor. Earlier many were not completing their treatment because of the cost of the medicines. Since the medicine is free now, they take the complete dosage.The Government is giving us an extra 3 per cent on the cost of the medicine. That is an added benefit for us."

Chemists are selling more drugs because now TB patients are completing their course of treatment. They are also deriving satisfaction from the fact that they are now a part of an important initiative. Till now the scheme has covered over 1400 privately diagnosed TB patients.

The district TB centre is notified of these patients through an online system used by the call centre.

Three years ago it was made mandatory for all healthcare providers to report every TB case to the local health authorities. One TB patient can infect 10 more and it is vital to making India TB free.

However, a majority of cases are not being notified. "We don't have any such instructions as such. If we receive any such instruction then we will definitely notify them. I have never notified," says a physician in Delhi.

It is believed that across the country nearly 10 lakh privately diagnosed TB patients are not notified.

The government is unable to gather data for planning at the national and state levels. It is also unable to monitor the treatment of these patients, to ensure there is no inappropriate or incorrect use of drugs.

Dr. Niraj Kulshreshtha, who is additional deputy director general, Central TB Division, said" We have advertised in newspapers. We have given it out on radio, TV and everything. We have a web based system, and there is provision of ID and password for all practitioners. They can just contact their district officer for a password and ID so that they can directly enter the cases into the system. However, I fully agree that the response was very little because we were dependent on the hard copy and everything. Now, in the last I think in a few months, I should say, the number has increased from a few thousand to lakhs. Now, at this moment we have got almost 1.2 lakhs from the private sector only."

In Mehsana, the information on TB cases is used for public health action by the district TB centre. Treatment supervisors make home visits to explain in detail the implications of the disease and precautions to be taken. If necessary, preventive medicines are given to family members. Follow up visits are made to check on treatment adherence. Efforts are taken at the level of community health centres as well as primary health centres like this one.

Jayaben J Panehal, ASHA worker, Akhaj village, said, "I tell the patients to eat green leafy vegetables and pulses and make them understand that they will be fine if they complete their medication."

The district TB officer and the staff have also established a rapport with private doctors which is striking and hopeful since there is a divide between government and private doctors in most parts of the country.

In Kheralu block, it has led to the Manav Kalyan general hospital, which is run by a charitable trust, joining hands with the government.

"Since we know that most of the patients belong to the lower middle class, we decided to not take the consultation fee of Rs. 30. We have also ensured that the patients do not have to pay anything for the X-rays that are a part of the diagnosis. If the sputum is needed, then we send them to the nearest TB hospital. We have made an entire list for all patients to call them after 30 days. Both our staff and the government staff go there. There is a coordination between the two," says Sundeep Rawal, trustee at the Manav Kalyan General Hospital.

Agrees Dr Ravi Patel, medical officer at the Manav Kalyan General Hospital, ,"This is a joint effort. The government alone cannot eradicate TB. A scheme like this requires help from both side."

The pilot project will provide a better estimation of the disease burden. However, there needs to be greater emphasis on achieving patients' adherence to treatment. It has to be about helping the patients.

There is also no component to ensure early detection of cases.  One way is through mass awareness campaigns. Pictorial and verbal messages in local languages are necessary.

Dr. Niraj Kulshreshtha said, "As far as mass awareness is concerned, do you know how expensive media buying is today. We have a campaign ofRs. 3 crore for 15 days only. How many campaigns can we afford to do from domestic budgeting? Partners should come forward."

Currently there are similar projects in Patna and Mumbai. If all states and districts are involved, the project can help reduce the number of new TB cases as well as the emergence of multi drug resistant TB. Around 20 lakh new TB cases are detected each year. Though the disease is fully curable with modern anti TB treatment, it kills nearly 2.5 lakh people annually.

In the 8 months since the Mehsana project was launched there has been a visible and positive impact. Clearly, the project has to be taken to the next level and expanded across the country.

source NDTV.com

STORY OF A TB PATIENT- HOW IT FEELS TO LIVE WITH TB

by muriel castille
Discovering my TB

In 2006, I was diagnosed with active TB. First the news came as a relief, I was going to be cured. It took 4 weeks for doctors to find out what was wrong with my lungs. Four long weeks tests after tests, doctor after doctor, valium became my best friend and my husband my good angel holding my hand each time it was too painful to carry the thought of my own death and never see my young children growing to embrace life.


But then, the relief was brief. I will be saved, but... welcome to the world of infectious diseases!
When the doctor asked me to go to his office, I was right away placed in a special room. I was asked to wear a mask. I was asked to put my life in the hands of the health unit, with a new doctor, a new staff and a lot of rules. I was asked to take a combination of 4 strong antibiotics, with a huge list of scary side effects, and to isolate myself from people. No more hugging and kissing the kids. It felt awkward first and then scary.
Could I have given this disease to someone? To my very young children? To my old grandparents? My husband? My friends? My neighbors? The thought was unbearable. It felt like being in another dimension.



I had very little symptoms, tiredness, occasional hot flashes and night sweats, a slight cough... I would have never seen a doctor for that. In fact my OB discovered my TB prior to a simple procedure that required an anesthesia!!! The anesthesiologist who came to my room that day, was mad at me for not letting him know I had a serious lung condition called COPD, he said I had the lungs of a 60 year old smoker. Me? I never smoked in my life! I exercise every day! What was he talking about? Did he have the right x-ray? Regardless how brutal Mr. anesthesiologist was, he saved my life, and probably my children's life too. Not knowing I had TB, I could have infected my family and other close persons. And who knows how they would have responded to the invasive treatment.

TB is not an ordinary disease, it is a fifth dimension one...

Getting used to TB
My first sputum was slightly contagious, the two other ones were normal. Contagion was rationally resolved, but what if? The health unit tested my immediate contacts. How stressful to report the names of the people in my immediate contact to a state worker? How stressful to ask my immediate contacts to be tested because I might have contaminated them... How stressful? How stressful to have your pediatrician testing your children. How stressful to wait for the answer. Two long days, where thinking is too scary.
Two weeks of antibiotics, mask and isolation was not that bad. Going to the health unit was becoming almost a nice habit, because of the staff's kindness and dedication. I was soon going to take my pills biweekly for a minimum of six to nine months. A lot to swallow 23 pills, under the vigilant eye of the TB person. I just started complaining that the news came like a shock again.




My resistant TB

The TB doctor called and let me know that the medicine was not working because my TB strain was resistant to 3 of the 5 main antibiotics. It is a very rare strain, fortunately rifampin and PZA work, along with levaquin, but that was not clear they would. Therefore I had to be in isolation again, wear the mask for another six weeks. Have 12 negative sputums. My treatment will be longer, maybe 18 to 24 months, and the drugs much harder on my body. I begged for my kids to be under preventive medicine, I wanted to be away from them and at the same time to hold them all the time. It was such a trauma. 
The TB doctor rapidly found a cure for me. I had to take Amikacin. First I had to have a pick line installed in my arm, I had never heard of that, and then I had to go to the hospital every day to be infused for an hour. I had wonderful nurses that really did the trick and supported me in my journey. Everything was going well, the pills, the mask, the infusion until one day when I checked in and the nurse did not have my drug. My insurance company did not want to cover the cost. I don't even want to tell here the amount of money, but we had to face another challenge and my husband did. I could not have been able to deal with that, and I feel so lucky because I could just be a patient dealing with my disease, without the money issue. I cannot imagine patients having to go through that on top of being ill. We found a solution and I got my infusion at home. A very kind nurse came one day, showing her face with no mask through the door. She said nice to meet you, I want you to see my face before I put my mask on. She was right on. She touched my life, I was still in the other dimension.
The other dimension again: I had to have a hearing test every week during the amikacin treatment. 8 weeks where I was scared in that tiny booth to miss a sound and not to raise my hand. I finally compromised with myself and did not care at the end if I were losing my hearing or not. I just realized that my kids, people around me were fine, and that eventually if everything would go well, I will be fine too.

Complying with the Health Unit and CDC regulations
The TB control unit really controls. First it is extremely frustrating to be a grown up educated woman having people watching you take your pills like an irresponsible person. It is somehow quite humiliating and insulting. It really feels like you are being punished, and it feels so unfair, because being sick and possibly endangering people's life comes already as a punishment... 
But soon, you learn that you don't have a choice. So, if you cannot fight the system, you have to accept it. You have to cooperate. The rules are simple. Be there when they come for the pills, and go there when you have to go to take them. When TB takes over your life, the remedy comes with the CDC. It too takes over your life but to save it and save others. People from the health unit do a tremendously wonderful job. They have patience, compassion and always time to listen to you. Which often lacks at a doctor's office.
Another scary thing for me was to deal with going to see the doctor at the health unit. You don't see the doctor, you see ten people, ten "feel like" judges people. There is no confidentiality, you put yourself on stage like when you present a thesis at the university. It was terrifying for me to put my thoughts together and face a sort of trial with my lungs x-rays glowing in the back ground. The first months every one was wearing a mask in that big cold room. And I could remember my doctors eyes like two sparkles of hope looking at me. I could not see a smile, but just a look, where I saw hope and compassion.
So many uncomfortable, surprising mixed-feelings happen to a TB patient. Like put on trial, the grown up person I am, has to ask permission in front of a committee to leave town for a few days or weeks with the privilege of taking the pills like a free mental patient. It is such an odd feeling. My doctor always trusted me, and so did the health unit team, and I am really thankful to them, because they really cannot afford taking a chance with a TB patient, but I will never forgot the struggle of an emergency trip and not being able to make it on time to see my brother before he died of cancer. 

Dealing with Insurance problems 
Like I wrote previously, we also encounter financial problems. While I was undergoing my Amikacyn treatment, I had to go to the hospital, with my mask, every day, to get the infusion. My sweet doctor knew that two months of that monster antibiotic will destroy my behind, if injected like the health unit can only afford to offer to TB patients. So, he had called my insurance company and ask if they will provide coverage for that expensive treatment, and they agreed. So, one day, as I was going for my infusion, like I did for the past two weeks every day, when I got to my room the nurse had a terrible expression on her face, and explained to me with compassion in her voice,  that she was sorry but that she did not get the medicine because there was a financial problem. So, I was already being nervous because I had to have the treatment on time, and I knew that I was loosing time, I had to call my dear husband and tell him that he had to take care of another problem: money. We had no clue, the treatment was so expensive and that the insurance company had denied it. Of course, after the huge stress, the administration allowed my nurse to get the antibiotic, but was that necessary for the patient to have to go to that worry? The hospital should have called us before I came to be infused. Any how, this was going to coast us 30 000 dollars. The health unit did not have any founding to help, but could have put me in jail for discontinuing my treatment, and my husband had to fight the insurance company. The logic for the company was so tricky and senseless, that my husband got them to pay for some of it. I wanted him to bring them to court, but I think that he had so much on his plate already that he just paid whatever the insurance did not want to cover. Someone has to do something about insurance companies. Yes, we could afford without struggling, but I cannot imagine a family having to go through that, and it is happening here in the US every day to too many people. 
Trust
Trust plays a huge role in a TB treatment. On one hand, like I reported, because of public health and based on experience, the government cannot trust a patient with active TB. Therefor we have the strict DOT program, direct observed therapy. On the other hand, you have to trust the doctor, the patient does not have a choice, and he has to follow a treatment that might not be the right one. TB is such a "rebel" disease that you cannot afford a mistake. Resistance to the antibiotics can be fatal. I was very nervous about that. I guess it is the same for any bad disease, but I did not have a choice of getting out of the program and have a different treatment. I was nervous. I felt trapped with one diagnostic. Even if I would have had a second opinion with a different treatment offer, I would not have been free to go with it. Fortunately, me going to the hospital every day paid off. I had the "magic" doctor.
Every day I had a different nurse, and every day the nurse will go "oh, you have the best doctor" "This man is agenius" "He is so wonderful" "You are so lucky" "whatever you have, he will get you out of it", "He is such nice man", "He is my hero""He is so smart", "He is a hard worker and brilliant", "He will save your life", "He ... I could go on and on about all the comments, and I never asked anything, the nurses could not stop bragging about him. And you know what, they were right, and I finally got to the point that I really felt very priviledged to have him as my doctor, I am very grateful. 
Another trust issue comes with people surrounding me. The disease is feared and a lot of it has to do with a lack of knowledge. People can rapidly become paranoid, backing up when they see you and  stop interacting with you. People who develop a cough and have been in contact with me, must have that TB spectra crossing their mind. I have to repeat that there is such a small probability I infected them, that is why the health unit only choose to test my immediate contacts. I am sorry I am responsible that they have to go through that, but I would like them to trust the fact that there is rationally no need for them to worry about being contaminated by me.


Thank you
I am still undergoing treatment, I probably have five more months to go, my lungs are clear and I really believe that I will be ok in the long run. I just had a long bad year, and next year will be better. I hope to look back on that experience and remember all the things I have learned and most of all the people who never than before had an opportunity to show me how much they cared for me.
I want to thank my husband who never failed to hold my hand and take over the financial and household responsabilities. Thank you to my wonderful mother, who did not listen to the doctors and came to my house to take care of my family, daring the TB devil, letting herself be tested. I want to thank my dear friends for undergoing the TB testing and exposing themselves, for never failing comforting me. Friends and family members who provide cooking for my family, went to the doctor with me. I want to thank the people who trusted me and were not scared of visiting with me. 
I want to thank all the nurses who gave me my iv treatment for their dedication and compassion. 
I want to thank the staff, the social workers, administrators and nurses of the health unit. Their job is amazing and vital for the program to succeed. A special thank to my TB "pill lady", she is helping so much dealing with the universe of TB. She devotes her time to listen to people with unconditional compassion.   
Thank you of course to the health unit doctor, who saved my life.
Thank you for the researchers and people who give and raise money for research.
Thank you for people who try to stop TB throughout the world.

567 DAYS AND 3969 PILLS AFTER...

I am finally finished with my treatment... I can have my life back...
It has been a long road, but now I am free of TB, I am free and I did not contaminate anybody in my family and among my friends and close contacts.

I have a 1 percent chance of relapse. Let's hope I won't be in this statistic...
I have been a good patient, swallowing all the 3969 pills... and signing my initials in each little square on the health unit monthly TB calendar.

I have to say, that it could have been so much worse... I was lucky the treatment worked well and that i did not have major side effects.
I am very very grateful to the marvelous doctor and the health unit staff for their wonderful help, understanding and compassion. I got to bound with some of them, and to them a special thank.

My thoughts go to the TB patients in treatment, I want to tell them to really follow all the procedures and reassure that there is light at the end of the journey. 
For a lot of them side effects are really terrible and painful. For those undergoing isolation at home or in a special facility, the psychological condition is often felt as torture. My heart goes to them, I want to tell them to keep taking the pills, and not to give up. Accepting the situation will make their life easier, and focus only on getting better.

Being a TB patient is not the same as being a patient with another disease:
You are just not a regular sick person  fighting a severe condition to get better.  But instead, you are both a sick person and a potential criminal at the same time. 
You are a sick person that could face jail, a sick person that infected or might infect other people, and has to worry every day about that and be responsible.
You are a sick person with a mask, isolated from people because tuberculosis is at the same time dangerous and naturally scary for people even when you are not contagious any more.
You are a sick person who feels guilty to be sick, punished by the disease and by society.
You are a sick person who does not have any choice of treatment.

There is room for improvement for TB patients therapy, and I am sure it will come.  But meanwhile for each individual facing this condition,  the best remains to follow the procedures and find ways to deal with it.  DOT works and is so far the most effective answer to contain this contagious disease.

My hope goes to those in the world who don't have access to treatment or have XDR-TB, I do wish that a brighter future will come very soon, with new drugs and more fundings to bring TB medicine to all.


TB research, Where are we????? can we gain control of TB??

New direction to fight drug resistant TB with stem cell bone marrow treatment :
    - Link 1


Research is the only hope patients, doctors and governments have to see new medicine prevent Tuberculosis, cure if faster with more efficient, less invasive and cheaper drugs.

It really seems like research is making progresses against tuberculosis.
Extraordinary advances have been made recently:

Sanofil and TB Alliance are teaming up to search for better drugs
Scientists from Seattle at the Infectious Disease Research Institute (IDRI)have been working on the project for 15 years, and the results for a vaccine booster of the actual but controversial BCG bring hope to the world.


http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2013148836_tbvaccine14m.html
http://www.seattlebiomed.org/press-release/seattle-biomed-expands-tb-program-third-principal-investigator
http://tbdrugdiscovery.org/
http://www.idri.org/

* A new vaccine therapy that could be very effective


http://vaccinenewsdaily.com/news/222053-antimicrobial-eliminates-tuberculosis-in-under-five-minutes

*  A better test to detect TB and resistant TB


http://www.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2011/04/19/how-to-wipe-out-tuberculosis
#WHO #TB #BCG #CHEST

Saturday, March 21, 2015

WHO TB report- Mind blowing statistics!!!!


The WHO Global #Tuberculosis Report 2014, published today, shows that 9m people developed#TB in 2013 and 1.5m died, including 360,000 people who were HIV positive.




Wednesday, March 18, 2015

KNOW ABOUT TUBERCULOSIS- THE DISEASE WHICH CONSUMES MAN!!!


In view of world TB day on march 24th, I was thinking of writing a blog, then I got this one, please read and share.In honor of World TB Day, observed  on March 24th,here are some information for you regarding tuberculosis.



One of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases has been with us since the time of the ancient Greeks and Romans. It has been found in thousand-year-old Egyptian mummies and is still present in millions of homes today. What is this ancient disease you may ask? Tuberculosis.




Pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) is a contagious bacterial infection in the lungs, which can spread to other organs. According to the CDC, TB is one of the most common infectious diseases in the world. And although significant progress has been made to eliminate this illness, 9 million new cases of tuberculosis were reported in 2011.
TB is spread from person to person through the air. When people with lung TB cough, sneeze or spit, they propel the TB germs into the air. A person needs to inhale only a few of these germs to become infected.
About one-third of the world's population has latent TB, which means people have been infected by TB bacteria but are not (yet) ill with disease and cannot transmit the disease, the infection can lie dormant in the body for years, and in others, it may become active and cause major complications. People infected with TB bacteria have a lifetime risk of falling ill with TB of 10%. However persons with compromised immune systems, such as people living with HIV, malnutrition or diabetes, or people who use tobacco, have a much higher risk of falling ill.

             When a person develops active TB (disease), the symptoms (cough, fever, night sweats, weight loss etc.) may be mild for many months. This can lead to delays in seeking care, and results in transmission of the bacteria to others
. People ill with TB can infect up to 10-15 other people through close contact over the course of a year. Without proper treatment up to two thirds of people ill with TB will die.
Ancient Roman physicians recommended treatments including bathing in human urine, eating wolf livers and drinking elephant blood. Today, though, modern medicine has found that Tuberculosis is preventable and treatable by more modern methods,  with early treatment being essential to stopping its progression.Since 2000 more than 37 million lives have been saved through effective diagnosis and treatment. Active, drug-sensitive TB disease is treated with a standard 6-month course of 4 antimicrobial drugs that are provided with information, supervision and support to the patient by a health worker or trained volunteer. The vast majority of TB cases can be cured when medicines are provided and taken properly.
More efforts are needed to assist in the global eradication of tuberculosis. To expand your own awareness of this infectious disease, please subscribe to my posts, this fortnight we are discussing on tuberculosis.
Please leave your questions in the comment box.