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  • Tuberculosis in Nepal

    By: IRIN Posted on: 4/5/2007


    NEPAL: Tuberculosis threat to carpet weavers

    05 Apr 2007 10:03:22 GMT
    Source: IRIN

    Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.

    KATHMANDU, 5 April 2007 (IRIN) - KATHMANDU, 5 April 2007 (IRIN) - Laxmi Tiwari is desperate to hold her three-month old daughter but they have been separated to prevent the child catching the tuberculosis Tiwari was diagnosed with last week. She contracted the infection at a carpet factory in the capital, Kathmandu, to which she and her impoverished family had come barely a month ago to escape the poverty in their village.

    "Now we are poorer because I can't work and my husband has to work harder to make enough money to feed us all," said 22-year-old Tiwari. She regrets having joined the factory where she was offered a good salary by local standards for knitting carpets eight hours a day.

    "I hope this treatment helps me to get cured soon," Tiwari told IRIN. She is being helped by a non-governmental organisation, Friends of Shanta Bhawan (FoSB), with an eight-month Directly Observed Treatment Short-Course (DOTS).

    Friends was among the first NGOs in Nepal to start the DOTS programme since it was introduced in 1996 by the National Tuberculosis Centre with support from the World Health Organization (WHO).

    TB is a leading cause of death among women, according to WHO. Annually, about 750,000 women die of TB worldwide and three million contract the disease. As TB affects women mainly in their economically and reproductively active years, the impact of the disease is also strongly felt by their children and families, WHO states.

    Since the introduction of DOTS centres, more Nepalese TB patients have had easy access to treatment, which is available to all citizens free of charge. A large number are internal migrants from rural areas to Kathmandu, which has the highest rate of TB prevalence in the country due to crowded workplaces such as carpet and garment factories where workers work and live together.

    Friends alone receives more than 200 TB patients every year and estimates that about 80 percent are carpet and garment factory workers. Carpets are one of Nepal's key exports.

    "The problem is that there is no data due to lack of effective study in these factories," said Nawaraj Subedi, DOTS supervisor from Friends. There is a problem getting access to these facilities as the owners' fear negative publicity and losing business in Europe and the US.

    Subedi says the history of cases they receive from the TB patients who are involved in carpet weaving is enough evidence to suggest that carpet and garment factory workers are vulnerable to the disease.

    "Fortunately, there is an easy way to cure the patients as long as they take the medicines regularly and follow the DOTS course," said Shova Oli from Helping Hands. The NGO, which treats about 150 TB patients every year, said more than 80 percent work in Kathmandu carpet factories.

    According to WHO, the Himalayan nation is one of the model countries in Asia to have successfully implemented the DOTS programme, thereby saving thousands every year from TB-related deaths.

    There are about 80,000 TB patients and 40,000 people are infected with the disease every year, according to the Ministry of Health.

    Despite the treatment available, TB kills about 5,000 people annually. The reasons vary from complications of HIV, serious illnesses and advanced stage of TB caused by delay in applying for treatment.

    "When we started our TB treatment programmes, we initially failed to realise the socio-economic impact of the disease and this is still a huge challenge for us," said Bhawana Shrestha, director of the German Nepal TB Project, which has been fighting the disease for more than two decades.

    Shrestha added that TB patients faced stigma attached to the disease. "Infected factory workers would have difficulty finding a house to rent as the house owners would ask the patients to leave if their disease is uncovered," she said. In addition, they would risk the lives of other workers if they continued living in the factories where they get free accommodation.

    Nepal aims to reduce the rate of TB prevalence by half by 2015 as one of its Millennium Development Goals and plans to eliminate the disease by 2050.

    "We're doing our best to achieve our target but again we can never be sure," Shrestha said.

    nn/at/mw

    "Addressing chronic disease is an issue of human rights that must be our call to arms"
    Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief The Lancet

    ~~~~ Twitter:@GertvanderHoek ~~~ GertvanderHoek@gmail.com ~~~

  • #2
    Re: Turberculosis in Nepal

    Nepal witnesses 40,000 TB patients additional every year

    Nepal is witnessing 40,000 additional tuberculosis (TB) patients each year, the National News Agency RSS reported on Sunday.

    According to the report, 5,000 to 7,000 in Nepal are dying of the disease every year, and 45 percent of the total population of Nepal are ailing from the disease
    .

    Tuberculosis is found to have attacked one in every three persons and one in every 10 persons are vulnerable to the disease in the country, the report said.

    In the central development region in the country, altogether 3, 963 people, including 1,439 women, were found to have suffered from TB in the current fiscal year 2006/07 ending in mid-July, according to report.

    Source: Xinhua

    "Addressing chronic disease is an issue of human rights that must be our call to arms"
    Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief The Lancet

    ~~~~ Twitter:@GertvanderHoek ~~~ GertvanderHoek@gmail.com ~~~

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Turberculosis in Nepal

      New trunk call of distress from Nepal

      Elephants with TB

      Kathmandu, June 8: Though four countries have signed agreements with the Nepal government to build new hospitals and the SAARC regional centre for tuberculosis (TB) research is located in Nepal, the disease has become a jumbo menace - stalking elephants doing tourist duty in the southern plains.

      Three elephants have died of TB and 10 more been found affected in the Chitwan National Park in the Terai plains, a major tourist attraction, Nepal's official media said Friday.

      After three of the elephants, used to give rides to tourists, died of TB in 2005, the Institute of Agriculture and Animal Sciences together with American organisation Elephant Care International tested 108 pachyderms.

      After examining their saliva, the National Tuberculosis Centre in Kathmandu diagnosed 10 jumbos with TB.

      However, while the governments of India, South Korea, Thailand and China have signed recent memorandums of understanding (MoUs) to upgrade medical facilities and build new hospitals in Nepal, animal healthcare in the Himalayan country is badly neglected.

      The national park has neither the funds nor the expertise to treat the ailing elephants.

      Instead of treating them, it has only reduced their working hours, the state media said.

      The sick beasts, which are likely to have caught the disease from humans, especially their keepers, are still being used to carry tourists, adding to the risk of spreading the disease among unwary visitors.

      "Their condition is getting worse," the state media said. "They cough, are losing appetite and are getting thinner."

      Treatment for the jumbos is likely to cost Nepali Rs.100,000 per animal who, during the period of treatment, should be put on rest.

      Besides funds, the national park lacks the expertise needed to treat the patients. The park authorities have not been able to diagnose which TB strain the animals are suffering from and what the medical dose should be.

      Of the 10 sick animals, seven are males and three females.


      Last edited by Gert van der Hoek; June 19, 2007, 04:27 AM.
      "Addressing chronic disease is an issue of human rights that must be our call to arms"
      Richard Horton, Editor-in-Chief The Lancet

      ~~~~ Twitter:@GertvanderHoek ~~~ GertvanderHoek@gmail.com ~~~

      Comment

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