ARMENIA: LARISA, A TEACHER DETERMINED TO BEAT DR-TB
Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders)
http://www.msf.org/msfinternational/invok e.cfm?objectid=8EF3EA3B-15C5-F00A-2561C2119D692D64 &component=toolkit.article&method=full_ htm l
March 24 2010
France
Yerevan, Armenia, February 2010 - Larisa recalls with a shudder the
moment she was diagnosed with drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB)
in the central TB clinic in the Armenian capital Yerevan.
"I thought first of all, that's all, I will die. I thought there was
nothing worse in this world. The colours all around changed. All was
black," said the 29-year-old who taught English at a university prior
to her diagnosis.
Drug resistant TB (DR-TB) occurs when TB bacilli present in a patient
are resistant to the first line drugs that are most effective in
combating the disease. Patients with regular TB can develop resistance
if they do not complete the full course of drugs, or a person can
be directly infected by drug resistant TB strain from an infected
DR-TB patient.
Armenia has one of the highest per capita rates of DR-TB in the world,
and since 2004 Medecins Sans Frontieres has been collaborating with
the Ministry of Health, running the only DR-TB treatment programme
in the former Soviet Union country.
MSF provides the drugs - which can cost up to 15,000 dollars per
patient for a two-year course - supervises the treatment and gives
patients psychological and social assistance. Through the World
Health Organization's Green Light Committee approved MSF programme,
the drugs are now accessible at a reduced cost to the program and
available free of cost to the patients.
Larisa was lucky. Armenia has a modern, well equipped national
laboratory for detecting DR-TB, with results from sputum tests
available within three weeks. But still, to be tested in to the
national laboratory, she had to be referred by a TB doctor, and in
Armenia as elsewhere, it is a new intervention and the TB program
and its staff are in a stage of developing this expertise with the
support of MSF In Africa and other underdeveloped countries, the
complex testing equipment needed to diagnose DR-TB is not available,
and people frequently go undiagnosed and continue to spread the
infectious, air-borne disease.
Before her diagnosis, Larisa knew a little about TB, but when Armenian
health authorities periodically sent text messages about free of charge
treatment for the air-borne disease, she automatically deleted the
messages. "Now communication is so great people come and go, different
parts of the population work together. Now in transport, all is very
developed and communication is more. It is not only the problem of
people who live bad," said Larisa, the mother of a one-year-old boy.
Dr Stobdan Kalon, the MSF head of mission in Armenia agrees.
"Now the extent of the spread of TB is so generalized that it is very
much likely that TB can affect anybody and now we are starting to see
TB in the general population, even the well-to-do affluent population,"
said Dr Stobdan, who is in charge of the MSF project with around 40
national staff and eight expatriate volunteers.
After her diagnosis in August last year, Larisa was hospitalized and
treated for two months until she was no longer spreading the disease
and is now six months away from completing her treatment.
She had two months of treatment in the MSF supervised DR-TB ward and
three months of treatment at an clinic, and she still has six months
of treatment to go.
Like the majority of patients, the toxic cocktail of drugs she must
take result in strong side effects, but Larisa is determined to
complete the treatment and resume her life fully.
"I could not imagine it (the treatment) was so hard. It really is,"
said Larisa, who lives in a neat, two-bedroom apartment with her
mother. "But I'll go to the end and I'll take all the medicine."
* Patient names have been changed
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders)
http://www.msf.org/msfinternational/invok e.cfm?objectid=8EF3EA3B-15C5-F00A-2561C2119D692D64 &component=toolkit.article&method=full_ htm l
March 24 2010
France
Yerevan, Armenia, February 2010 - Larisa recalls with a shudder the
moment she was diagnosed with drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB)
in the central TB clinic in the Armenian capital Yerevan.
"I thought first of all, that's all, I will die. I thought there was
nothing worse in this world. The colours all around changed. All was
black," said the 29-year-old who taught English at a university prior
to her diagnosis.
Drug resistant TB (DR-TB) occurs when TB bacilli present in a patient
are resistant to the first line drugs that are most effective in
combating the disease. Patients with regular TB can develop resistance
if they do not complete the full course of drugs, or a person can
be directly infected by drug resistant TB strain from an infected
DR-TB patient.
Armenia has one of the highest per capita rates of DR-TB in the world,
and since 2004 Medecins Sans Frontieres has been collaborating with
the Ministry of Health, running the only DR-TB treatment programme
in the former Soviet Union country.
MSF provides the drugs - which can cost up to 15,000 dollars per
patient for a two-year course - supervises the treatment and gives
patients psychological and social assistance. Through the World
Health Organization's Green Light Committee approved MSF programme,
the drugs are now accessible at a reduced cost to the program and
available free of cost to the patients.
Larisa was lucky. Armenia has a modern, well equipped national
laboratory for detecting DR-TB, with results from sputum tests
available within three weeks. But still, to be tested in to the
national laboratory, she had to be referred by a TB doctor, and in
Armenia as elsewhere, it is a new intervention and the TB program
and its staff are in a stage of developing this expertise with the
support of MSF In Africa and other underdeveloped countries, the
complex testing equipment needed to diagnose DR-TB is not available,
and people frequently go undiagnosed and continue to spread the
infectious, air-borne disease.
Before her diagnosis, Larisa knew a little about TB, but when Armenian
health authorities periodically sent text messages about free of charge
treatment for the air-borne disease, she automatically deleted the
messages. "Now communication is so great people come and go, different
parts of the population work together. Now in transport, all is very
developed and communication is more. It is not only the problem of
people who live bad," said Larisa, the mother of a one-year-old boy.
Dr Stobdan Kalon, the MSF head of mission in Armenia agrees.
"Now the extent of the spread of TB is so generalized that it is very
much likely that TB can affect anybody and now we are starting to see
TB in the general population, even the well-to-do affluent population,"
said Dr Stobdan, who is in charge of the MSF project with around 40
national staff and eight expatriate volunteers.
After her diagnosis in August last year, Larisa was hospitalized and
treated for two months until she was no longer spreading the disease
and is now six months away from completing her treatment.
She had two months of treatment in the MSF supervised DR-TB ward and
three months of treatment at an clinic, and she still has six months
of treatment to go.
Like the majority of patients, the toxic cocktail of drugs she must
take result in strong side effects, but Larisa is determined to
complete the treatment and resume her life fully.
"I could not imagine it (the treatment) was so hard. It really is,"
said Larisa, who lives in a neat, two-bedroom apartment with her
mother. "But I'll go to the end and I'll take all the medicine."
* Patient names have been changed
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress