An anecdotal account of Haiti's medical situation created by structural violence and negligence. Go to Peoria's Medical Mafia and PMM Daily to see Peoria's role. Also see Live From Haiti and Haitian Hearts.
Sunday, November 07, 2010
Multidrug Resistant Tuberculosis
Photo by John Carroll, November 2010
Chest x-ray: Pulmonary tuberculosis afflicting a 25 year old Haitian female
Multidrug-resistant (MDR) tuberculosis is a treatable, airborne infectious disease that killed an estimated 1.5 million people between 2000 and 2009 — an annual rate 10times that of the H1N1 influenza virus.1,2
During this period, barely 0.5% of the estimated 5 million people who became ill with MDR tuberculosis received treatment with quality-assured second-line drugs. The rest continued to transmit resistant bacteria to others — in their homes, communities, workplaces, and other places where people congregate.
The results: an increase, in a number of locales, in the proportion of tuberculosis cases that were MDR; a frightening increase in the proportion of strains with broad-spectrum resistance, especially in areas with a high prevalence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection; and, in some areas, an unraveling of hard-won progress in tuberculosis control.
New England Journal of Medicine, November 2010
Thanks for posting this great link to NEJM. I worked in northern Uganda on TB and is really a bad situation, I just specialized in Internal Medicine with a final elaborate on TB in resource limited settings.
ReplyDeleteMy husband will come to Les Cayes to work (he is engeneer)on January 2011 and I will follow him and I will try to work a bit. Where do you work in Haiti exactly?
Thanks a lot, Dr.Federica Pozzi (Italy)
I forgot my email
ReplyDeletepozzi.federica@hotmail.it
Thanks!!!
Dr.Federica Pozzi