(Reminder: No class on Monday. I have to go to
Osaka.)
We will listen to the first 5 minutes of the
story.
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Tuberculosis Can Be Cured, But It Must Be Treated
the Right Way
If TB is not handled correctly, it can become resistant to
drugs -- a serious problem in many countries. Second of two reports. Transcript
of radio broadcast
23 April 2007
VOICE ONE:
This is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS in VOA Special
English. I'm Barbara Klein.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Steve Ember. On our program this week, we
tell about the disease tuberculosis. It is one of the world's leading infectious
diseases. We also tell about efforts to fight tuberculosis in several countries.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
The World Health
Organization says one-third of the world's population is infected with the
bacteria that cause tuberculosis. That is about two billion people. One in ten
people infected with the TB bacteria will become sick with tuberculosis at some
time during their life. The WHO says almost nine million people became sick with
the disease in two thousand five. About one million six hundred thousand people
died of the disease that year. However, the WHO also says almost sixty percent
of TB cases around the world are discovered. A large majority of them are cured.
VOICE TWO:
Most people infected with the bacteria never
develop active TB. However, people with weak body defense systems often develop
the disease. TB can damage a person's lungs or other parts of the body and cause
serious sickness.
The disease is spread by people who have active,
untreated TB bacteria in their throat or lungs. The bacteria are spread into the
air when infected people talk or expel air suddenly.
Most TB cases can be cured with medicines.
Successful treatment of TB requires close cooperation among patients, doctors
and other health care workers. The World Health Organization has a five-step
program to guarantee that TB patients take their medicine correctly. The program
is called Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course, or DOTS. Directly observed
means that patients must go to local health centers every day or several times a
week to take their medicines. Health care workers watch to make sure patients
take their medicine every day. Full treatment usually lasts from six to nine
months to destroy all signs of the bacteria.
VOICE ONE:
It is very important for patients to be educated
about the disease and its treatment. Sometimes patients fail to finish taking
the medicine ordered by their doctors. Experts say this is because some patients
feel better after only two to four weeks of treatment and stop taking their
medicine. This can lead to the TB bacteria becoming stronger, resistant to
drugs, and more difficult to treat.
This kind of TB is called multi-drug resistant
tuberculosis or MDR-TB. The World Health Organization says MDR-TB is one hundred
times more costly to treat than the other form of the disease.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
The World Health Organization says most deaths
from tuberculosis are in developing countries. More than half of all deaths from
TB are in Asia. And half of all new cases are in six Asian countries. They are
Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia, Pakistan and the Philippines.
More than twenty-five percent of the world's
multi-drug resistant tuberculosis cases are in Asia. Patients with MDR-TB must
take more powerful and costly drugs for more than two years. Some patients
experience side effects from the drugs.
VOICE ONE:
Experts say the fight against TB and drug
resistance has been successful in Hong Kong. In the past fifty years, Hong Kong
has reduced cases of TB by almost ninety-eight percent. In the nineteen fifties,
the British colonial government built TB hospitals and began giving vaccines to
children. The government also replaced poor, unclean housing with modern public
housing.
Today, the Chinese government gives anti-TB drugs
free of cost in public health centers. Health workers visit patients who fail to
go to health centers to get their medicines. So Hong Kong has very low levels of
drug-resistant TB.
VOICE TWO:
The World Health Organization is improving
its efforts against TB in China. Almost one million four hundred thousand people
there develop active TB each year. Almost twenty-five percent of the world's
multi-drug resistant cases are in China. The WHO says the situation is now
improving. It says half of China's provinces have put the DOTS treatment method
into effect. This has resulted in about a fifty percent reduction in deaths from
TB.
The WHO has also set a goal for nations in the
Western Pacific area. They are being urged to cut by half infection rates and
deaths from TB within three years. Doctors say this goal may not be possible
because the disease AIDS is a serious problem in the Western Pacific. Other
problems are poverty and lack of money for public health.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
In Africa, more than three million people are
living with TB. Five hundred thousand people there die each year from the
disease. The number of TB victims is rising quickly in Africa. This is mainly
because of the virus that causes AIDS. The virus weakens the body's ability to
fight disease.
Drug-resistant TB is a serious problem in South
Africa. Sizwe Hospital in the city of Johannesburg treats only people with
MDR-TB. Three thousand new cases of MDR-TB were identified in Johannesburg alone
last year. People with this kind of TB have only a fifty percent chance of being
cured. Patients must take one painful injection of medicine and as many as
twenty-four pills each day. Treatment can take up to two years. The drugs have
serious side effects.
VOICE TWO:
Few people survive a new kind of TB, called
Extreme Drug-Resistant TB. This disease is resistant to just about every drug
known to science.
The National Health Laboratory in Johannesburg
tests for drug-resistant TB. Its workers test five hundred samples from patients
from all over southern Africa every day. The testing often last several weeks
because each bacterium must be tested in several ways. Almost one-fourth of the
bacteria tested are found to be drug-resistant. These have to be tested again to
show which drugs they resist.
During this time, the patient may be infecting
other people. So it is important to find ways to test for the disease more
quickly. The laboratory is now carrying out experiments with tests that identify
drug-resistant bacteria within two days. This helps health workers quickly
identify an infected person and begin treatment.
VOICE ONE:
Patients being treated for MDR-TB are separated
from their families, sometimes for years. This causes economic and social
problems for patients and family members. The head doctor at Sizwe Hospital says
most patients accept treatment and separation. Health workers believe patients
with drug-resistant TB should be separated to protect their communities. But
human rights activists say this would be a violation of their rights.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
Tuberculosis is a health emergency in Russia. In
February, the Russian parliament approved almost three billion dollars to fight
infectious diseases such as TB.
Russian studies show that eighty-three of every
one hundred thousand people in Russia are infected with TB. Thirty thousand
people die of the disease every year. However, the number of people infected is
not fully known because officials say not all cases are reported. The WHO
official for TB control in Central Asia says education about tuberculosis is
lacking. The population does not know much about the disease or how it is
treated.
VOICE ONE:
The United Nations says the highest rates of
reported infection in Russia are among men between thirty-five and sixty-four
years of age. Many of these men are unemployed and drink too much alcohol. Many
are former prisoners who are also homeless. So treating these men is difficult.
Health experts say tuberculosis spreads easily in prisons. The infection rate in
prisons is about twenty times higher than the general population. Drug-resistant
TB is also a problem there.
VOICE TWO:
World Health Organization officials say fighting
TB in Russia is not just a medical problem but also one of economics and
organization. They say government money is now available for health care workers
to visit treatment centers to study the care and progress of the disease. There
is also more money to train workers and provide equipment for laboratories.
Health officials say there is now hope in the fight against TB.
((THEME))
VOICE ONE:
This SCIENCE IN THE NEWS program was written by
Shelley Gollust. Brianna Blake was our producer. I'm Barbara Klein.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Steve Ember. Join us again next
week for more news about science in Special English on the Voice of
America.