Sowetan

SA medical students at high risk of TB infection from hospital patients

Study reveals difficulty getting treatment

- By Dave Chambers

Medical students are at high risk of catching tuberculos­is from their patients.

Researcher­s from the nongovernm­ent organisati­on TB Proof found South African trainee doctors face triple the risk of students in five other countries with high TB rates.

Writing in the June edition of the South African Medical Journal‚ the researcher­s said students were saddled with medical bills of up to R104 000 after contractin­g TB from patients.

Doctors Helene-Mari van der Westhuizen and Angela Dramowski said poor infection control at training hospitals was blamed by 10 of the 12 medical students who reported contractin­g TB.

The students told researcher­s that hospital doctors sometimes mocked the students when they put on the rudimentar­y face meant to protect them.

“Sometimes the doctors go‚ ‘Oh look at the third years!’ [It made us wonder] are they not aware‚ do they know something that we don’t? It’s very confusing‚” one of the students said.

And seven of the 12 expressed “strong disappoint­ment” with the support they received from Stellenbos­ch and Cape Town universiti­es‚ the institutio­ns that took part in the study.

“My university protocol was dismal‚ to be honest‚” said one. masks “I wasn’t sure what to do or where to go.

“It was just another stressor I didn’t need when I was trying to get better.”

The doctors questioned students who had contracted TB between 2010 and 2015.

“Three participan­ts mentioned that their experience with TB had made them realise how difficult it can be to undergo treatment‚” they said.

“Most participan­ts felt that TB had increased their empathy toward patients and motivated them to provide patientcen­tred care.”

But for some trainees‚ the experience turned them away from the medical profession.

One said: “I didn’t realise when I went into medicine that I was exposing myself to people’s diseases – in fact all the diseases came running towards us. Being a doctor ... is not worth me being so close to death.”

The researcher­s criticised “an unjust situation” where medical students trained in a hazardous environmen­t “with no recourse to assistance with diagnostic and treatment costs for an occupation­al disease”.

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