Tag Archives: TB

TB and Undernutrition: A Vicious Circle

Tuberculosis (TB) and Undernutrition are two of our key issues at Results. Both have a devastating impact on the lives of the poor in developing countries, yet both have a worryingly low profile in the aid and development discourse in donor countries. They are also two issues that are closely intertwined.

Credit: UNITAID

Credit: UNITAID

It has long been known that there is an association between TB and malnutrition, although it is difficult to determine what the nutritional status of individuals with TB was before the onset of the disease. Malnutrition makes people more susceptible to the development of active TB, and  active TB contributes to the development of malnutrition. This vicious circle impacts not only on individuals but can easily transfer to their families and their communities.

Tuberculosis patients have lower Body Mass Index (BMI), muscle mass and subcutaneous stores of fat than control groups. A study in Malawi found that the differences can amount to as much as 20% between healthy individuals and those with active TB. This may be because some participants in the study suffered malnutrition before contracting TB, but the disease also increases demand for energy which contribute to increased weight loss if that demand cannot be met.

In full treatment, TB patients can quickly recover the weight that they have lost, but researchers have consistently found that muscle-mass and protein levels are much slower to recover. Even in patients deemed to be ‘cured’ of TB, these nutrient deficiencies can persist. This is one reason that comprehensive care for TB patients is vital long after the body has been cleared of bacteria.

There is also evidence to suggest that malnutrition, and the consequential weakness in immune function, makes it more likely that exposure to TB bacteria will result in full tuberculosis, rather than development of the latent form of the disease that is found in 2 billion people around the world. Therefore, improvements in nutrition for people who are most at risk of developing TB  should directly decrease the number of TB infections, improve treatment prognoses and save lives.

On 8th June the UK and CIFF will host a global summit called Nutrition for Growth to raise attention, and funding for long-term nutrition programmes, prioritising at first 20 countries that have a high-burden of undernutrition. RESULTS is calling on the UK to make a pledge of £150million a year, or £750million over five years. A multi-year pledge is important to give stability to developing countries and allow for long-term planning and scaling up of nutrition-specific programming within stronger health systems. An improved global investment in nutrition will not only lead to a reduction in child deaths but will have an important long-term impact in reducing diseases as adults.

Good nutrition won’t definitely stop you getting tuberculosis, but it certainly gives you a better chance of fighting it successfully. If the world truly wants to see a reduction in the burden of global diseases like TB, ensuring good nutrition for all would be an excellent first step.

Note: For a more comprehensive review of evidence linking TB and undernutrition, click here

Guest Blog: A Call For History Makers

Todays guest blog post is brought to you by Endalkachew Demmiss, author of ‘The Mystery of God’s will’.

In 2004, I was a bed-ridden multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) patient and missed class for more than two years. Before 2008, the medications were not available in Ethiopia. During those days, patients like myself were isolated in small rooms, waiting for their death due to the lack of access to expensive of anti-tuberculosis drugs. That was my fate. Fortunately I was able to get the life-saving drugs miraculously from a charitable organization, like the programs now supported by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. After two years of suffering from the drug’s side effects I got the opportunity to go back to school and pursue my career as a pharmacist and global health advocate.

Credit: Claire Moodie

Credit: Claire Moodie

Our world can be a safe place to her inhabitants, but only if we win the fight against epidemics, which have showed time and again throughout history to be one of the greatest threats to our global brothers and sisters. Epidemics like the black plague, smallpox, measles and today, AIDS, TB and malaria have dealt devastating impacts for human kind.

Can you imagine if there weren’t scientists, committed political leaders or health professionals standing in the gap during these challenging times? My existence would have been threatened without these heroes. They have given us tools through modern science, political will and effective partnerships like the Global Fund, to make staggering advances in global health in the short space of just over a decade.

In developing countries, HIV/AIDS, TB, and malaria continue to kill at an alarming rate, more effectively than war. These major global health threats cause substantial morbidity, mortality, negative socioeconomic impact, and human suffering. Disease-specific interventions have had a considerable impact on improving health systems. However, we still need more resources, more research and attention from the global community to get tangible results on prevention, treatment and patient care. It’s time for the Big Push to defeat these diseases and we need champions and heroes now more than ever.

During the time of my fight against MDR-TB, we faced dramatic challenges, but now because of the effective interventions financed by the Global Fund and its partners, people can have a chance to get the medications freely. The Global Fund stands between life and death of millions and needs donors’ commitment for increased and sustained funding.

This is my call — from a poor nation to history makers — to be the generation who can change the course of history. Let’s march mercilessly against TB, HIV and malaria. In an age of vaccines, antibiotics and dramatic scientific progress, these diseases can be brought under control.

This post is part of a series produced by The Huffington Post, The Global Fund, and its partners as part of The Big Push campaign. For more information on The Global Fund, click here. To read more posts about The Big Push — The Global Fund and its partners efforts to eradicate HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis — click here.

Dying For Gold tour blog now live!

After months of planning and preparation, the Dying for Gold UK tour officially begun last Thursday. To keep everyone updated on the campaign, screenings, meetings with academics and media and the tour more broadly, we have been keeping a daily blog on the Dying For Gold website.

Below are a few extracts from the blog, that can be seen in full on the Dying For Gold website. We will be updating the blog daily from the city that we are in, so keep an eye out for future posts!

​Day 1: Edinburgh

On Wednesday, we left the bright lights of London ​and headed north by car to the beautiful city of Edinburgh,  ahead of  the first screening of ‘They Go To Die’ on Thursday. ​After a nights rest at a local, quintessentially “Scottish” B&B, we got up early to pick up Jonathan Smith-the film’s director- from the airport, before hitting the road to start campaigning! Although the weather was grey and glum, that didn’t dampen our spirits or interest in the campaign from Edinburgh’s students who were keen to learn more about the tb epidemic in southern Africas mines and what they could do to help.

Day 2: Newcastle

We bid our farewells to majestic Edinburgh on Friday morning and took the scenic route to Newcastle. Pete from Medsin kindly put us up and accompanied us to the student’s union where we set up our ‘FREE GOLD’ stall.  Our  golden action cards caught the magpie eyes of many of the students who were shocked to discover the extent of the TB epidemic in Southern Africa.

Later we headed to Newcastle’s Side Cinema where we were almost to capacity, thanks to the hard work from Medsin and RESULTS’ group members Ellie, Ian and Frances amongst others. The audience were impressed with the film and asked interesting questions about establishing ‘fair trade’ and ‘lung safe gold’. People were keen to sign action cards and put their names to the concrete set of policies we are demanding from Anglo Gold Ashanti.

Day 3: Leeds

On Saturday morning we rose early and left our host’s house in Newcastle to make the two hour journey down the M1 to Leeds.

We shot through the Yorkshire countryside with a spring in our step after the success of the screening in Newcastle. We arrived at the home of our new hosts. Alice and Sarah, at a house filled with Medsin committee members in the characterful Hyde Park area of the city.

The day was as grey and drab as one can imagine so our golden message sparkled with a renewed brightness. The screening was attended by over 100 people who asked some excellent questions on the issue of TB and mining. The messages are now flowing freely from all members of the Dying for Gold team!

Another great day on the road! Tomorrow Jonathan will be doing an interview with the Lancet to discuss our tour and the messages we have about the campaign.

To read the blog in full click here

Countering HIV stigma and creating support in Ethiopia

The following post is brought to you by Steve Lewis, our Global Health Advocacy Manager. Following on from our delegation post, Steve describes our visit to one of Addis Ababa’s health centres:

In February I travelled to Ethiopia with RESULTS staff and five UK parliamentarians to see health programmes and assess the effectiveness of UK support for poverty reduction in the country. The trip was a fascinating mixture of meetings with the ‘highest’ and the ‘lowest’ in the chain of support for poverty-related health programmes.

We met with DFID officials, the Ethiopia Minister of Health and officials at the Africa Union (AU). The meeting with the AU took place in their sleek new building constructed the Chinese government.  But while these meetings provided us facts and figures, it was hard to understand the impact of the work on the ground level.

We were able to see how this work affected communities during a site visit conducted by AMREF to local water and sanitation projects as well as to a local health centre in a poor and crowded urban area of Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia. Queues of patients waited on benches in the open air, waiting to be seen by nurses and staff who work to diagnose and treat common illnesses such as tuberculosis, pneumonia and stunting (malnutrition). The health centre had no actual doctor on site – Ethiopia has an acute shortage of doctors and most other senior health personnel.

I found the most encouraging part of the visit to be a meeting with a support group of women with HIV/AIDS. On previous visits to Africa a few years ago, I had seen high levels of stigma against people living with HIV. No one wanted to admit it, and no one wanted to know. But in this health centre a crowded group of women in multi-coloured dresses sat around a table and waited patiently to tell us their stories.  They told us they meet every Wednesday morning, and their numbers are growing.

As children crawled around the floor, the women were not shy to tell us about their lives. The health centre has diagnosed them with HIV but now provides daily drugs to keep the impact at bay (anti-retrovirals or ARVs). Some years ago a woman would have had to take around a dozen pills a day, with severe side effects, but now they take just three pills.

“What about the side effects?” I asked.

A confident young woman told us she suffers no side effects and feels perfectly healthy. “These ARVs have kept me alive,” she said simply.

The ARVs are bought in bulk for Ethiopia by the Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM). Our UK delegation were proud that the UK is one of the biggest donors to the Global Fund.

The other huge advance in medical technology has been vast improvements in ‘Prevention of Mother to Child infection’ (PMTCT). Only ten years ago most babies born to HIV positive women would have been born HIV-positive themselves and would have quickly died. Now, a simple regimen of check-ups and a daily pill at the crucial time means nearly all babies are born HIV-negative. They do not have HIV and have the chance to grow up healthy. This health centre provides 46 women with anti-retrovirals and 44 of them have given birth to healthy children. Two were born with HIV, of which one baby passed away. The HIV-positive child comes with his mother to this support group.

The women give each other emotional support to come to terms with living with HIV. But they hold their heads up and seem happy to talk to strangers about their lives. Our parliamentarians asked many inquiring questions but the women were not fazed.

-          “How many children do you have?”

-          “Two, and that’s enough…”

-          “Do you husbands come to the support group meeting?”

-          “No, and that’s the way we like it.”

-          “What hopes do you have for your daughter when she grows up?”

-           “I would like her to be a doctor.”

The visit provided an excellent example of how Ethiopia is dealing with tough health challenges and effectively demonstrated that UK aid money is being put to good use.

RESULTS UK leads delegation to Ethiopia

Last week, RESULTS led a cross-party parliamentary delegation to Ethiopia to explore how the country is dealing with key health issues affecting international development. The country continues to face enormous health challenges that include the spread of infectious disease and malnutrition. Yet, in light of this, Ethiopia is making impressive strides towards improving key health indicators and come up with innovative ways of responding to its health worker crisis.

RESULTS was joined by parliamentarians from all three major parties – Sir Tony Cunningham MP, Heather Wheeler MP, Kevin Barron MP, Baroness Hooper and Lord Hussain. The parliamentarians were able to attest that aid works – over the past ten Ethiopia has cut its infant mortality rate in half and it is on track to meet Millennium Development Goal 4 to reduce under-five mortality rates by two thirds. It has also created a model for dealing with its health worker crisis, which has successfully delivered TB care and treatment to the population.

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria

The delegation was able to visit one of only two hospitals in Addis Ababa that treats multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB). With support from the Global Fund, the most successful health financing mechanism to date, the hospital is providing MDR-TB treatment to patients from all over the country. MDR-TB is a form of TB that does not respond to the standard treatment using first-line drugs and is extremely difficult and expensive to treat. The Global Fund grant covered the cost for renovating the hospital’s MDR-TB ward and provides all second-line drugs needed to treat MDR-TB.

Innovative Reponse to the Health Worker Crisis

Ethiopia is one of 57 countries worldwide that faces severe shortages in their healthcare workforce and lacks doctors, nurses, midwives and other health workers needed to deliver healthcare to its population. In response to this crisis, Ethiopia has developed an innovative model called their Health Extension Programme (HEP).

The HEP shifts tasks to less specialised health workers called Health Extension Workers (HEWs) in order to deliver essential healthcare to communities that would otherwise not have access to such services. HEWs are women from the local community aged at least 18 years with 10 years of schooling who are provided with one year of healthcare training encompassing family planning, water and sanitation, and control of infectious diseases, including TB. Two HEWs are placed in each local health posts that provide primary care to their communities.

Health Extension Workers Delivering TB Care

The delegation was able to meet with HEWs in both Addis Ababa as well in more rural settings around Awassa in the south of the country. We were able to visit sites supported by TB REACH, a funding mechanism that finances projects to carry out TB diagnosis and treatment in areas with limited or no access to TB care.

The TB REACH grant currently allows HEWs to collect sputum samples from individuals with TB symptoms and provides local health centres with motor bikes to collect these samples and transport them to the lab for diagnosis. TB diagnosis has more than doubled since the project started, more people are being treated for TB and fewer people are dying or failing to complete their treatment.

Improving Child Survival Rates

Ethiopia’s HEWs have also been trained to treat the diseases that needlessly kill more than hundreds of thousands of children under five each year: malaria, diarrhoea, pneumonia, as well as malnutrition. Within the HEW programme’s first five years, malaria death rates in Ethiopia decreased by more than half and new HIV infections fell by 25 percent. In addition, mortality of children under five dropped by 28 percent, a lauded outcome.

The UK Government is a key donor supporting the Ethiopian Government to carry out health interventions that are working. The delegation heard time and again about how effectively and transparently the Ethiopian Government is using UK aid to reach the most vulnerable, making a real difference in the lives of some of poorest. The delegation validated that UK aid equals excellent value for money.

TB in TIME Magazine

TIME Cover, Credit: James Nachtwey

In a blogpost last week we discussed the increased media attention on tuberculosis in recent weeks. A study, reported on in The New York Times and Al Jazeera, highlighted that many developing countries are awash with falsified and substandard TB drugs. This was encouraging the spread of drug-resistant forms of TB (DR-TB), something that was also said to be the case in a Wall Street Journal article discussing India’s counter-productive TB strategy.

Following from these, this week TIME Magazine declares “Contagion: Why drug-resistant TB threatens us all”. Worryingly, the article points out that despite estimates “there will be over 2 million new cases of MDR TB from 2011 to 2015, yet today only 10% of new MDR cases get proper treatment”. Continue reading

Tuberculosis in the Media

Tuberculosis remains the world’s deadliest infectious disease after AIDS. In 2011, 1.4 million people died from TB, and every year more than 8 million people get sick with the disease. These figures are often shocking to many who believe TB to be a disease from the past, and recent media reports have highlighted some of the reasons for these unacceptable figures.

India’s TB strategy isn’t working

On Saturday, The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) raised concerns that an emergency strategy to defeat drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) in India was instead encouraging more deadly and unstoppable strains. DR-TB refers to strains of TB bacteria that are resistant to any anti-TB drugs.

Geeta Anand reports that the strategy is treating at least some, if not many, DR-TB patients with medications that they are already resistant to. The results of such a strategy inevitably lead to the emergence of strains that have even greater resistance.  Indeed, there are a growing number of reports of extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB), with the WHO reporting that are at least 77 countries with confirmed XDR-TB cases. XDR-TB is a form of TB that is resistant to isoniazid and rifampicin (the two most powerful anti-TB drugs) as well as any of the second-line anti-TB injectable drugs. Treatment of these strains are much more difficult, and costly, to treat. DR-TB strains can take up to two years or more to treat with drugs that are much more potent, toxic and expensive (MDR-TB drugs can cost up to US$5000, compared to US$20 for standard TB drugs).

The problem with India’s approach, which Mario Raviglione (Director of the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Stop TB Department) refers to as ‘complete nonsense’, is that it tries to be one-size-fits-all. Patients are given the same six-drug cocktail, without testing to see which drugs they are resistant to.

Worryingly, the article points out that ‘India doesn’t have enough labs to test every patient for resistance, and likely won’t for years’.  Raviglione suggests:

‘if there aren’t enough labs to do that [thorough testing], Mumbai should conduct surveys to see which drugs its patients are most resistant to, then replace those in the standard cocktail’.

For now some patients are (relatively) lucky in that they are able to find private hospitals that can test their resistance, and subsequently pay out-of-pocket for a cocktail of drugs that is more likely to work for them. However for the vast majority of patients this will not be an option. TB health officials have been urging the government to change its strategy, before its simply too late for the millions of TB patients in India.

Countries awash with fake and substandard TB medication

TB PILLSThe New York Times and Al-Jazeera have both reported on a recent study published in the International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, which found that fake and poorly made antibiotics are being widely used to treat tuberculosis.

Researchers collected samples of the two frontline TB drugs (isoniazid and rifampicin) from pharmacies and markets in 17 countries where TB is common across Africa, Asia, South America and Europe.

From this sample, they found that nearly one in ten pills failed to meet basic quality standards, typically having too little of the active ingredient (the molecule that destroys the TB bacteria) present. Some of these were poorly made, while others had either corroded in transport or had been produced and distributed through criminal enterprises.

The study highlights that access to treatment is one of the main factors behind patients not receiving the supervised treatment and quality medicines that the WHO recommends. The cost of travelling to clinics is often very difficult for patients to bear, particularly because of the expense associated with travel and the high cost of in-patient treatment. Roger Bate, co-author of the study, says that in Zambia for example, ‘treatment through the tuberculosis program is three times more expensive than self-administering drugs purchased at local markets’.

The fact that the use of these drugs is widespread in at least 17 countries with high rates of TB must be addressed. As Lucica Ditiu has said:

“[By using substandard drugs to treat TB], in addition to the fact that the patient remains infectious and his treatment results will be really, really poor, you also develop a multi-drug resistant TB which is one of the worst forms of TB that unfortunately we have in this world. And that’s much more difficult to treat, it’s much more difficult to cure and is much more expensive.”

DR-TB strains of TB are a real and growing problem, and not just in the developing world. In the UK the number of DR-TB cases continues to rise, with 431 cases (8.4%) resistant to any first line drug reported in 2011, up from 342 in 2010 – an increase of 26%. It is encouraging that these stories are being featured in such prominent publications and media outlets, and we must continue to make parliamentarians and influencers take note of the growing epidemic and urge them to take  coordinated action to save millions of lives.

Click here for the NY Times article.

Click here for the Al Jazeera report.

Click here for the WSJ article.

Full info on They Go To Die film screenings

Dates for UK screenings of ‘They Go To Die’ in March 2013

Contact felix@results.org.uk for more information

4th March: Oxford, Ultimate Picture Palace, 7pm

7th March: Edinburgh. Cameo Cinema, 7pm

8th March: Newcastle. Side Cinema, 7pm

9th March: Leeds. Hyde Park Picturehouse

10th: Manchester and Liverpool.

11th: Sheffield. Lecture Theatre LT3 , Arts Tower, Sheffield Uni, 8pm

12th Norwich/UEA UEA Congregation Hall, 7pm

13th Cambridge. Mill Lane Lecture Room, 7pm

14th Warwick

15th Birmingham.

16th Glasgow for Medsin Global Health Conference

17th Southampton Lecture Room G, Murray Building, Southampton University

18th Bristol. The Cube, 7pm

19th Poole. Post Graduate medical centre, Poole hospital, 6.30

20th London RESULTS screening Ritzy Cinema, Brixton, 7pm

21st Brighton The Old Market, 7pm

22nd London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine John Snow lecture theatre, 7pm

For full information on They Go To Die, including screenings, please click here.

January action launched! Screen new hard hitting TB documentary in your town

Rates of TB among Southern African gold miners are the highest in the world. In 2011, 11% of South African miners were infected with TB compared to an industry average of 5%. So rife is the disease in the mines, that mining activities are estimated to be responsible for around 760,000 new cases each year. That’s one in three of all new cases in the whole of Southern Africa.

These statistics are terrifying and they allude to an epidemic of such proportions that we can genuinely say it is driving the spread of TB around the globe. But that’s all they are; statistics, numbers. Out of context, they don’t mean anything. Number as high as this tells us nothing of the human suffering caused by TB/HIV.

That’s what Yale epidemiologist Jonathan Smith felt too, when he visited the mines of South Africa. Mere numbers and statistics simply don’t tell us anything about the devastation wreaked by disease. So, instead of carrying on his research and publishing an academic paper which may or may not make any difference in the lives of the miners, he decided instead to make a film about their families, treatment, pasts, hopes and futures; giving a human face to the epidemic.

The film he has produced is called ‘They Go To Die’ and follows the stories of miners sent home from the mines with no continuity of treatment and no resources to access care…..men who were sent home to die. This month we are asking you to arrange a screening of his ground breaking work in your community. Inside this email you’ll find everything you need to make that happen.

Materials included this month:

GROUP MEETINGS FOR TELEPHONE CONFERENCE: 8th January 2013. 8pm

Guest: Jonathan Smith, Epidemiologist at the University of Yale

This month there are groups meeting to join the conference call in: Central London, South London, Poole, the Stort Valley, Birmingham, Oxford, Macclesfield, Central Sheffield, South Sheffield, Leicester, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Norwich, Cambridge, Leamington Spa, Bath, Reading and Linlithgow.  If you would like information on the location of your local group, please get in touch with us in the office at: felix.jakens@results.org.uk

If yo would like to join the conference call there are 3 numbers you can call – 0844 762 0762, 0203 398 1398 or 0800 22 90 900. You must then enter the participant code, which is 18723. If you would like advice about which number to call please contact us in the office.

We look forward to you joining us

Felix Jakens
Grassroots Campaign Coordinator

US approves treatment for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis

Yesterday, the US Food and Drug administration (FDA) approved a new drug for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis that can be used as an alternative treatment when other drugs fail. The drug, to be called Sirturo, was developed by Janssen Therapeutics, the pharmaceuticals unit of Johnson & Johnson, and is the first in a new class of drugs that aims to treat the drug-resistant strain of the disease. Sirturo, also known as bedaquiline, will be used on top of standard treatments and works by blocking an enzyme the disease pathogen needs to spread throughout the body.

Even as it announced the approval, however, the FDA has cautioned that the medication may lead to a risk of heart problems and has advised doctors to prescribe the treatment carefully.

“Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis poses a serious health threat throughout the world, and Sirturo provides much-needed treatment for patients who have don’t have other therapeutic options available,” Edward Cox, director of the office of antimicrobial products in the F.D.A.’s centre for drug evaluation and research, said in a statement. “However, because the drug also carries some significant risks, doctors should make sure they use it appropriately and only in patients who don’t have other treatment options.”

Of the nine-million active cases of TB in the world, about half a million are caused by multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, which manifests when the disease pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis becomes resistant to isonazid and rifampin, the two drugs most widely used to treat TB. Although there were only 100 cases of multidrug-resistant TB in America last year, elsewhere the disease is a growing problem, especially in regions of Africa, South Asia and Eastern Europe. The approval of this new treatment for MDR TB marks an important development in the fight against TB and this strain of the disease, however careful monitoring of its success and side effects will be important, before the drug is rolled out on a larger scale.