Scientists draw attention to looming danger of TB
Accra, March 11, Ghanadot/GNA - Scientists have discovered that without
treatment in five years, 50 per cent of infected Tuberculosis (TB) persons will
die, whilst 25 per cent become chronic.
It is also estimated that each day, 25,000
people develop active TB, an airborne disease,
caused by a germ known as the Mycobacterium
Tuberculosis.
This, according to Dr. Frank Bonsu, Programme
Manager, National Tuberculosis Control Programme
(NTCP), posed a serious threat to society both
socially and economically.
He said with the trend of people receiving
treatment, only 25 per cent would be cured in
the five years.
Dr Frank Bonsu, who was addressing the monthly
health talk organized by the Ghana Health
Service in Accra on Tuesday, said TB could
affect every part of the body, including the
uterus of females as well as the testis of
males, but pulmonary TB, which is the commonest,
affects almost half of the population.
He said this form affects the lungs, making it
virtually impossible for patients
to embark on any economic venture, due to a
breakdown of the immune system leading to
perpetual weakness in the body and excessive
coughing.
Dr. Bonsu said though curable, more people,
especially those with HIV/AIDS, continue to die
from TB than any other curable infectious
disease in the world.
He said it was therefore important that the
disease was tackled with all the seriousness, to
ensure its total eradication.
The talk is part of the World TB Day
celebrations, which falls on March 18 to be
celebrated in Wa on the theme; “I am Stopping
TB”.
The message forms part of an empowerment
programme to ensure a concerted effort
by all and sundry in stopping the disease.
Dr Bonsu said there were two groups of the
disease: the Latent TB infection where people
could only be carriers of the germ without
infecting other people and the TB disease which
was infectious.
He explained that a person with latent TB cannot
infect but those with the TB disease could
easily infect others through coughing, sneezing,
shouting, singing and talking.
Dr Bonsu noted that the TB germ once inhaled by
a tuberculin free person got infected and the
bacillus would spread throughout the body within
four to six weeks.
He mentioned the five forms of TB infections as
Pulmonary TB, Extra Pulmonary TB, Multiple Drug
Resistant TB, Extremely Drug Resistant TB and TB
in HIV infected persons, adding, that the most
common and dangerous form of TB was that of the
lungs, which formed about 80 percent of all TB
cases.
Dr Bonsu reiterated that TB control was no
longer the burden of health professionals but
everybody’s responsibility.
He also stressed on the importance of other
interventions such as avoiding over crowding,
ensuring good personal and public hygiene, early
diagnosis and treatment, ensuring BCG
vaccinations for new born babies and controlling
environmental pollution.
He said with the TB control strategy known as
the Directly Observed Treatment Strategy (DOTS),
which had now reduced treatment from eight
months to six months had made Ghana to record a
remarkable improvements.
Dr Bonsu said increase in adherence to treatment
and proper supervision of patients had also
sharpened the cure rate.
He said with the introduction of the new
treatment regimen, it was expected that there
would be better compliance to treatment to
prevent Multi-Drug Resistant TB.
“We must stop stigmatizing those affected with
TB and encourage them to seek early treatment,
take their drugs and advocate that TB is curable
and treatment is free,” Dr Bonsu added.
GNA