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TB
in Zimbabwe: a silent explosion propelled by HIV
Health Development Networks (HDN)
November 08, 2007
http://www.zimbabwejournalists.com/story.php?art_id=3146&cat=1
Tuberculosis (TB) is
out of control in Zimbabwe. With years of health system neglect,
one of the most severe HIV epidemics in the world, and the stark
social and economic conditions many of its people have to contend
with, prevention and control of TB is increasingly desperate.
As one of the world's
highest burden countries, Zimbabwe already has some shocking TB
challenges to address. In absolute numbers, the country is the 20th
most TB-affected nation in the world. Factor in overall population
size and that position rockets to seventh on global rankings.
Adding to the complexity,
a significant proportion of TB in Zimbabwe may not be easy to identify.
WHO estimates that just under half of its TB disease can be detected
using the established TB diagnostic test: the 'sputum smear'.
But with limited testing services available - including only
one laboratory able to carry out key bacterial culture and drug
sensitivity tests - many cases of TB either go undiagnosed
or are treated without an accurate diagnosis. As a result, TB treatment
in Zimbabwe often relies on a doctor's ability to recognise
the disease, or on guesswork.
And yet, just a couple
of decades ago, the country won acclaim for its successful TB programme.
That was before HIV changed the TB control equation.
"Since 1954 we
have had a very successful fight against TB, to the point where
the association declared that the war on TB had been won,"
remarked Ellen Ndimande of the Zimbabwe Association for the Rehabilitation
and Prevention of Tuberculosis (RAPT). "But the past few years
have shown us that the disease has re-emerged to become the number
one killer of people with HIV."
HIV weakens the immune
system, making people living with HIV (PLHIV) up to 50 times more
susceptible to TB infection and disease. Even the potential benefit
of antiretroviral (ARV) treatment is in doubt, because PLHIV with
TB often seek treatment before ARVs are prescribed, or go undiagnosed.
In 2002, the Government
of Zimbabwe declared HIV a national emergency but, at the epicentre
of the HIV epidemic, Zimbabwe now has six times the number of TB
cases that it did 20 years ago.
HIV is also be undermining
the government's response to TB in other ways. According to
Zimbabwe's Minister of Health and Child Welfare, David Parirenyatwa,
not enough has been done to tackle the growing threat.
"I have to admit,
as a government, we have not done enough to address the issue of
tuberculosis, and this is something that I have stated publicly,"
he said in an interview with Partners Zimbabwe. "The focus
on HIV has largely driven our attention from TB, and this is something
we have to redress as a matter of urgency."
"We recently launched
the fixed-dose combination for TB treatment, which will make it
easier for the uptake of drugs and adherence," he added. "But
much more work needs to be done to integrate TB and HIV. My ministry
needs to push up the management systems in order to have appropriate
advocacy on TB."
Little is known about
how big a problem drug-resistant TB is in Zimbabwe, although conditions
appear to be ideal for multi-drug resistant (MDR) forms to flourish.
MDR can emerge as a result of incomplete or inadequate TB treatment,
such as when antibiotics are taken for too short a time. According
to latest WHO data, Zimbabwe already has the lowest treatment success
rate among all the TB high-burden countries, with only just over
half of all cases successfully treated. Without a complete course
of antibiotics, the remainder stand a good chance of TB recurring
in a drug resistant form. And this can only get worse, as current
fuel shortages dramatically cut transport options, making trips
to clinics - and as a result, TB drugs adherence - even
more difficult.
Paradoxically, sky-rocketing inflation has also made migration to
neighbouring countries for work even more frenetic. And porous borders
between Zimbabwe and South Africa provide a convenient gateway for
drug resistant TB to take the same path.
"We are sure that
we are seeing multi-drug resistant TB, but because there is no laboratory
that can do the culture or sensitivity tests we don't have
the evidence to prove it," commented Lynde Francis, Director
of The Centre, a community-based care facility in Harare. "The
government is saying that because we do not have any drugs for TB
patients there is no point in testing for multi-drug-resistant TB."
"One result of
this lack of support and information is that people with TB are
starting to face almost the same social stigma as people with HIV,"
Francis added. "Many now believe that a positive TB test automatically
means you are HIV positive as well, and so they are avoiding even
getting tested."
Diagnosis, management
and treatment of TB in Zimbabwe, particularly among PLHIV, cannot
be improved without significant increases and acceleration of investments
in services, as well as in patient literacy about TB.
In June 2005, a proposal
to strengthen the national TB control programme was submitted to
the fifth round of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and
Malaria. A year-and-a-half later, the grant agreement was signed
(December 2006), and today about one-third of the US$ 12 million
funds has reached the country and implementation is just commencing.
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