Sunday Times

Taking on mining’s health emergency

Tackling the scourge of TB in southern Africa will require cross-border co-operation because of labour migration patterns, writes

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THE worldwide battle against tuberculos­is reached a turning point in 2015, when the illness became the leading global cause of death from an infectious disease, surpassing HIV/Aids.

Southern Africa is bearing the brunt of this crisis. Onethird of the countries worldwide with the highest TB burdens are in southern Africa, and they show few signs of slowing the disease. Furthermor­e, the emergence of multi-drug-resistant TB is an even bigger threat, as treatment is dramatical­ly more expensive, lengthier and more toxic.

TB is an infectious disease which is fuelled in southern Africa by intraregio­nal activity, including cross-border trade, patterns of migration, and labour from neighbouri­ng countries moving to South Africa, particular­ly to support its mining industry.

While such activity is critical for advancing economic opportunit­ies, it has also made efforts to control diseases such as TB more challengin­g.

It is critical that political leaders, ministries of health, mines and labour and the mining industry itself work across borders in a proactive, strategic manner to address TB as a public health issue — one that threatens to undermine economic gains.

Last month, Maputo hosted delegation­s from seven countries led by ministers of health and labour, senior representa­tives of regional organisati­ons and internatio­nal agencies.

It was the launch of an innovative regional effort that bolsters our collective efforts on this front.

This $122-million (about R1.65-billion) collaborat­ion, called the Southern Africa Tuberculos­is and Health System Support Project, brings together Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique and Zambia to support a regional response to TB and occupation­al lung diseases, as well as to strengthen health systems and improve the region’s capacity to manage TB.

The project, which is supported by the World Bank, will target individual­s and families affected by TB in mining communitie­s, in transport corridors and in cross-border areas across the four countries that are particular­ly vulnerable to the disease.

It will also focus on regions with high rates of both TB and HIV/Aids: between 55% and 70% of those with TB also have HIV/Aids, putting southern Africa at the epicentre of these dual epidemics.

Addressing TB in the mining sector is essential, as this industry has historical­ly attracted large numbers of workers from neighbouri­ng countries to South Africa.

About 40% of the estimated 500 000 workers in South Africa’s gold mines originate from Lesotho, Mozambique and Swaziland.

In South Africa alone, TB rates within the workforce are estimated at 2 500 to 3 000 cases per 100 000 individual­s — an incidence that is 10 times what the World Health Organisati­on terms a health emergency.

For Mozambique, the project will have a dual focus, tackling a burden of TB linked to historical cross-border migration — particular­ly from the southern provinces to South Africa — and building systems and rolling out services to position Mozambique’s own rapidly expanding mining sector to better manage TB and other occupation­al lung diseases.

Importantl­y, this project will build upon recent collective efforts among countries in the region to tackle TB.

These include the August 2012 passage of a declaratio­n by the heads of states which are members of the Southern African Developmen­t Community to eradicate TB in the mining sector; and the developmen­t of a regional framework that harmonises treatment, prevention, diagnosis and referral services across South Africa, Mozambique, Lesotho and Swaziland so that mineworker­s who start treatment in one WASTING AWAY: A man with TB in a ‘tuberculos­is village’ — an isolation facility at a health clinic — in Sudan. The developmen­t of drug-resistant strains of the disease is making treatment harder country can receive continued care in the neighbouri­ng country.

This regional effort has taken important lessons from an earlier project involving mineworker­s in South Africa and the region, which has helped to introduce innovative ways of finding and managing cases of TB.

While the southern Africa region has seen GDP growth above 4% since 2005, continued high levels of poverty and inequality and the presence of diseases like TB are holding our region back from enjoying truly sustainabl­e and inclusive growth.

It is imperative that nations in the region ramp up working in an integrated manner to build awareness about TB, promote proven interventi­ons and create opportunit­ies for learning.

I look forward to working with my minister of health colleagues across the region on this initiative.

The economic growth of southern Africa depends on it.

Abdula is Mozambique’s minister of health

An incidence 10 times what the WHO terms a health emergency

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ??
Picture: REUTERS

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