Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

BCC leads in TB treatment

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A CLOUD of dust hangs in the smelly hot air, all one can see are mounds of dirt strewn all over the place, young children can be heard chuckling in a nearby corner while flies buzz like bees all over. This is Ngozi Mine compound in the outskirts of Bulawayo.

The mine is a Bulawayo City Council dumpsite and home to a number of homeless people who survive on scavenging.

Mr Gideon Tshuma (50) is the chairman of the area and a successful­ly treated tuberculos­is patient.

According to him when he fell ill he did not know he had TB.

“I fell ill and initially did not know that I had TB. I had been coughing for a long time, during the day I was much better but at night the coughing was extreme such that I would wake up with pain in my chest and lower stomach,” he said.

Mr Tshuma said he would then feel unbearable pain and he remembers getting an attack when he had visited the rural areas.

“I went to my rural area Bhazha in Matopo in Matabelela­nd South and while I was there I had an attack and I decided to go to the clinic to understand what it was. I was told that they wanted to screen me for TB and HIV and I agreed,” he said.

Mr Tshuma explained that he was given a container that he used to collect sputum that was then tested for TB bacteria at Maphisa District Hospital. The results came back five days later and it was positive for TB while his HIV test came out negative. After the test I was then counselled by the nurses at the institutio­n.

“I was told and given a lot of informatio­n by the nurses on TB and HIV too. They told me that TB was curable and that people who get TB are not necessaril­y HIV positive,” he said.

He said he was encouraged to take his tablets religiousl­y until the course was over to be completely cured of the infection. Treatment was then initiated and he collected tablets every week which he would drink from his home.

“I would drink them every day at 8pm and I pushed three months and my sputum was tested again and I still continued treatment. In the fourth month of treatment the hospital suggested that I collect my treatment from Bulawayo since that was where I was based and I was also physically fit to go back to the city,” said Mr Tshuma.

He was told that if they supplied him with tablets enough for a month then if he ran out maybe he would not have any busfare to travel back to Maphisa hence they transferre­d him to the nearest clinic which is Cowdray Park Clinic.

Each Thursday he said he would go to Cowdray Park Clinic to collect his weekly medication until the treatment period of six months was over. He got screened for TB again and this time he came back with negative results. He had been successful­ly treated of TB which is still a challenge in the country despite it being treatable.

He said he had no challenges in collecting medication as he would walk to Cowdray Park Clinic each week.

He said people who develop drug fatigue compromise treatment.

“The moment you stop taking your TB treatment it affects how you heal and at times you end up having resistance to the TB drugs and your healing is affected,” said Mr Tshuma.

Asked how he was infected with TB he said it was not his first time being affected.

“My mother told me that I once suffered from TB and I was admitted at Thorngrove Infectious Hospital, I was about 5 years old. I was cured but then I got infected again. I think now the reason is because of the living and working conditions that we have here at the dumpsite. The air is very dirty and our homes are not well ventilated so I’m sure the bacteria was somewhere in the air and I was infected,” he said.

He also said there are a lot of dirty gases in the atmosphere coming from the dumpsite that could

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