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A year of accomplishments for Lesotho's national multidrug-resistant
TB program
By Sadie Richards
Strains of tuberculosis that cannot be treated with traditional approaches
and drug regimens pose an ever-growing threat to global health. Just one year
ago, patients in Lesotho infected with multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB)
faced almost certain death. Today they and their families have reason to hope
for a better prognosis.
Partners In Health Lesotho’s (PIHL’s) MDR-TB Program Director,
Dr. Hind Satti, recently reflected on the accomplishments of - and challenges
still facing - the national program she helped spearhead last July.
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A treatment supporter, PIHL record
book in hand, descends into a village to visit one of her patients. |
PIHL worked hand-in-hand with the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare (MOHSW)
and other partners (including the Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics
and the World Health Organization) over the past 12 months to build up the
basic infrastructure, expertise and technical support needed to test and treat
patients for MDR-TB. The national program now encompasses a state of the art
MDR-TB hospital, laboratory and pharmacy, all of which are fully staffed and
complemented by a team of treatment supporters who provide personalized, in-home
patient care.
Satti attributes PIHL’s achievements largely to the organization’s
community-based model of care and its collaboration with the MOHSW from the
start. PIHL’s approach involves building local capacity from the ground
up, within a framework that offers staff financial incentives, personal protective
equipment, and continual training. High staff and patient retention has also
resulted.
PIHL’s MDR-TB program currently treats 155 patients living in all ten
districts of the country. This number is growing rapidly and is expected to
reach 280 by the end of the year, and 450 by the end of 2009. Most of these
patients receive treatment in their homes. Community health workers (a.k.a.
treatment supporters) visit each patient twice daily to administer medication,
provide psychosocial support, screen and counsel family members and/or accompany
extremely sick patients to the hospital in Botsabelo.
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Dr. Hind Satti with five young MDR-TB patients, most of whom are orphans.
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The youngest of nine children who are part of the program is only three years
old. Of these young patients, three are sick enough to be in-patients at the
20-bed hospital. One young boy, however, is well enough to attend school.
With the comprehensive PIHL package of medical care, food supplementation and
financial support, the others may soon join him.
PIHL also trains “expert patients” who become an integral part
of the community-based model. These are out-patients who have often returned
to health from the brink of death to take on roles similar to those of the
treatment supporters. They identify new potential patients, combat stigma associated
with the disease and seeking treatment, visit patients at home, provide health
education on TB, HIV and sexually transmitted infections, and provide psychosocial
support to other patients and their families. As Satti attests, they are “the
living, breathing example of the success that can be reached in treating MDR-TB” through
community-based programs.
To stave off the spread of drug resistant strains of the disease, and for
effective programmatic scale up to continue successfully, more funding – for
treatment, prevention and research – will be necessary. Satti specifically
calls for increased investment in research that will give rise to evidence-based
policies and procedures. Since more than three quarters of Lesotho’s
MDR TB patients also have HIV, Satti is convinced that lessons from Lesotho
can inform disease treatment and prevention in other resource-poor countries
struggling with a high burden of MDR-TB and HIV co-infection.
[published July 2008]
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