News
 International
 National
 Embassy News
 Arts & Living
 Business
 Travel & Hotel
 Medical Tourism New
 Taekwondo
 Media
 Letters to Editor
 Photo Gallery
 News Media Link
 TV Schedule Link
 News English
 Life
 Hospitals & Clinics
 Flea Market
 Moving & Packaging
 Religious Service
 Korean Classes
 Korean Weather
 Housing
 Real Estate
 Home Stay
 Room Mate
 Job
 English Teaching
 Translation/Writing
 Job Offered/Wanted
 Business
 Hotel Lounge
 Foreign Exchanges
 Korean Stock
 Business Center
 PR & Ads
 Entertainment
 Arts & Performances
 Restaurants & Bars
 Tour & Travel
 Shopping Guide
 Community
 Foreign Missions
 Community Groups
 PenPal/Friendship
 Volunteers
 Foreign Workers
 Useful Services
 ST Banner Exchange
  Medical Tourism
Do It Right the First Time, Every Time!
By Bobby Ramakant
Asia Correspondent
Dr. Anne Fanning

Are we losing grip on the evidence-based basic principles that were in the core of fighting tuberculosis? Challenges like drug resistance which are posing a threat to global health security warrant a review.

Also, the #endTB dream will continue to remain a mirage if we fail to address social influencers that increase TB risk for a large majority of our populations, severely impacting the most disadvantaged. These were some of the insights shared by Dr. Anne Fanning, who has dedicatedly worked for fighting infectious diseases especially TB, and was instrumental in bringing issues of less heard populations such as indigenous peoples to the fore.

Dr. Anne Fanning was in exclusive conversation with CNS (Citizen News Service) at the 48th Union World Conference on Lung Health in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Dr. Anne Fanning has earlier served a decade on the board of the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union), and has been its past President too. Earlier this year Dr. Anne Fanning was inducted in the Alberta Order of Excellence. She has earlier served as Director of TB Services in Alberta, medical officer at the WHO Global Tuberculosis Programme, and as an eminent physician, emeritus professor and global health leader at the University of Alberta.

Her work is decorated with several honours including the Order of Canada; the Japanese Anti-Tuberculosis Association TB Global Award; the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal; the Alberta Centennial Medal; and the Canadian Medical Association¡¯s highest honour, the Frederic Newton Gisborne Starr Award.

She has also received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Canadian Society for International Health; the May Cohen Award from the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons Canada; and Physician of the Year Award from the Capital Regional Medical Staff Association. Anne was also named as ¡°One of Alberta¡¯s Physicians of the Century¡± by the Alberta Medical Association in 2005.

Are we forgetting the core principles TB taught us?

"We have gone a million miles from when I started in TB. And when I started, it was ¡®doctor knew best¡¯, ¡®patient did as he/she was told¡¯ and we hoped they took their pills for 18 months, back then. We have enormously advanced in terms of having earlier diagnosis, better drugs, better systems, and better diagnostics, but we have missed out some of the core that TB taught us" said Dr. Fanning.

These core lessons were taught to us by ¡°the programmes that were in poor countries like Tanzania, Malawi, Nicaragua, among other nations, that recognized that there are a few core things that you have to do – you had to find the case with simple and relied-on diagnosis, you had to assure that the drugs were on hand and there were no stock-outs, and you supervised the treatment until cure" added Dr. Fanning.

The unheard voices...

Reflecting on basic lessons that helped lay the foundation for TB control, Dr. Fanning said that ¡°We focused on the patient – that demonstrated, that, with a systematic approach you could do it – but that was not patient centric! We have to hear from the patients - we have to acknowledge that some patients we never hear from because they cannot afford to get into the system. I hear the strengthening of the drugs and diagnostics, but I worry about forgetting the core of the patient being at the centre, and the patient deserving respect and recognition and support to get through it, and having the right to an opinion. I think those were the things - I am not sure we ever had it [ideal patient-centric TB programme]!

So we had some strengths, we engaged larger communities, scientific communities, the lab communities, the civil society and all of them have learned but there is still a dispersion of knowledge and I worry about the core of it. I think at the heart of it all we have to remember that the patient, and it is probably the poor patient is the neediest and that¡¯s where our focus should be."

Do it right the first time!

As the oft-quoted analogy goes, 'locking the stable gates after the horse has bolted', it is vital that inter-sectoral efforts to eliminate TB are scaled up before it becomes too late to deliver on the promises enshrined in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Our governments have promised to deliver on SDGs by 2030.

¡°25 years ago, the message was if you do it right the first time you do not have to worry about drug resistance. We ignored the drug resistance probably because we had nothing much to offer. I think the first message was the key message. Do it right the first time. We still are not really doing it right and the ¡®horse has bolted¡¯ and now we have to chase its tail. We have to have programmes, and expensive programmes and monitoring, to find those drug-resistant cases so we won¡¯t have a new epidemic. I have faith that we will do it, do you?"

Yes, we do have faith we can do it, but we also cannot deny that we are not doing enough to bring TB decline rates on track so that TB gets eliminated from the planet by 2030. "At current trajectory, TB will be beaten in 200 years' time" said UK parliamentarian Nick Herbert at a Symposium organized by the World Health Organization (WHO) before the 48th Union World Conference on Lung Health opened in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Dr. Fanning advises "with all these players involved and with all these technologies, labs and new drugs, the key thing is to DO IT RIGHT whether it is the first treatment or the drug resistant treatment. Every treatment has to be patient-focussed, accepted by the patient, and accessible to all. And I worry that we get distracted."

Cannot end TB in silos, inter-sectoral response is must!

Neither we can meet TB related SDGs in silo nor can we meet any other like ending hunger for instance. Malnutrition as evidence shows is the biggest risk factor for TB. Catastrophic costs related to TB drive people to even more severe levels of poverty. With over thirteen years left, how can we radically accelerate the progress towards ending TB, and thereby other SDGs too?

"I think the radical piece is contained within those SDGs. I think SDGs are extraordinary – they are a grassroots movement and they have been 'bought into by the world' – I think we have to make the world aware that it has bought into it – because I am not sure people in my community know that. I think we have to pay a lot of attention to those underlying social determinants of health that we have ignored – at our peril – because – the drugs are not enough! I think you can shut down TB if it is simple to teat, may be if it is drug resistant, but you are never going to wipe it out without addressing the housing, poverty, crowding and vulnerability of people.

So, I will return to The Union¡¯s core values which are ¡®Health solutions for the poor¡¯ - we have to remind ourselves of that again and again. The burden of disease for me and my peer group growing up in Canada is almost gone, and it is gone because we have had a healthy existence and we have to make that available for everybody¡± emphasized Dr. Anne Fanning.

The silver lining...

The urgency to act is now. There is no excuse for inaction while we wait for a perfect vaccine to hammer the final nail in the coffin and end infectious diseases. "Infectious diseases have laid up an opportunity to actually eradicate with, if not vaccine, then simple diagnosis and fairly simple, straightforward treatment. It is hard to think of a non-communicable disease that fits into that category and has simple tools, simple systems to find, detect and treat.

Now, it is beginning to be done with diabetes, hypertension, and smoke cessation, which is critical. We need to find those simple population-based interventions and go for them as those are examples of health solutions for the poor¡± said Dr. Anne Fanning.

Latent TB reservoir cannot be ignored

Frighteningly deep reservoir of latent TB infection (where TB bacteria is present in the body but does not cause disease or spread) is another elephant in the room. With over one-third of population estimated to have latent TB, it is impossible to end TB unless we sap this pool dry. Dr. Anne Fanning shares the concern: "When you are thinking about a programme that is barely keeping its head above the water, in managing what you have, and adding on treatment of latent infection, that¡¯s a huge challenge, and we are not doing that well. We need to go beyond the known cases and start looking in the bushes for the missing TB cases but programmes are already overwhelmed.¡±

¡°I heard some encouraging stuff at this conference. I heard of people talking about a laboratory network that systematically executes quality control from the grounds up to the super national level and introduces that same quality for all the new tools, such as, Gene Xpert, LAM, new diagnostics and for drug susceptibility testing – that¡¯s fairly encouraging! But do not forget that they can be operating out here when the patient and the treater, the physician, is elsewhere - they got to talk to each other. They got to talk to the community!¡±

Even healthcare workers are at TB risk!

Fragile health systems and overwhelming disease burdens are making it even more difficult to follow basic infection control practices in healthcare facilities. This elevates risk of infection transmission not only among patients but also other people in healthcare facility including the healthcare providers.

Dr. Fanning stressed "We cannot ignore the need to protect healthcare workers – they are among the most valuable resource we have – the nurses, outreach people, among others - and we have ignored that responsibility at our peril. The cost of re-fitting treatment centres with air flow, ultra-violet and giving every healthcare worker a N95 mask which they can discard every hour, might be huge¡± but we cannot ignore this issue anymore. Cutting the transmission chain of infection is critical if we are to end TB.

What gets measured, gets done (and improved)!

¡°I am really proud of The Union for its acknowledgement of the importance of health solutions for the poor. It is very exciting that TB system-approach did not forget the patients and did enable expansion substantially of the programme, and always being able to evaluate at the end of every year. It is the only disease apart from HIV probably where I know you can get data. That makes me really proud¡± rightly said Dr. Anne Fanning.

Services must reach the most marginalized

"What I remember most was an indigenous patient I had met few years ago, after I had finished seeing patients (retired) who had been born in an indigenous community and had from the age of 4 onwards been in a residential school – and had been badly treated, traumatized and infected with TB. As for many of those indigenous kids, lost both his sisters to stories that sound like they could have been TB, and was severely physically damaged by a disease. His whole life is so severely affected – we just cannot let that happen anymore, anywhere, ANYWHERE!¡± said Dr Anne Fanning.

Are these TB hotspots of marginalized people, on public health blindspots? Unless appropriate services and care reaches out to everyone who is in need, there is no ending TB.

Walking back from this insightful listening session with Dr. Anne Fanning, one realization was stark clear: either we will fail on all SDGs or deliver reasonably well on all of them. If we end TB it will also imply that we have made radical progress on housing, ending poverty, ending hunger, reducing inequity, furthering urban sustainable models of development, among others – there is no other way around reaching the #endTB bull¡¯s eye.

This interview is part of CNS Inspire series – featuring people who have had decades of experience in health and development, and learning from them what went well and not-so-well, and how these learnings can shape the responses for sustainable development over the next decade.



Related Articles
    WHO Award Shines Spotlight on Thailand's ...
    When People with HIV Can Live Normal Lives ...
    UK's Decision to Consider Vaccinated Indians ...
    Step Up Pace Globally If Universal Vaccination ...
    Will Inclusion and Accountability Take ...
    Were People the Missing Link in Covid Response?
    World Localization Day: Peasants Rise Up to ...
    Save Lakshadweep: Stop 'Reform' Which Is Not ...
    Tobacco-Caused Diseases Are a Bane to the ...
    Keeping Workforce Healthy Is Also a Smart ...
    Should Asia Pacific Lead World with Robust ...
    Will Post-2015 Development Agenda Integrate ...
    Nepal Leading Tobacco Control in S. Asia: Will ...
    Regular HIV Prevention Counselling Reduces ...
    Strong Tobacco Taxation Policy Adopted despite ...
    Biggest Killer of Kids Under 5 Is Pneumonia
    Scaling Up Natural Fertility Awareness Methods ...
    Should Asthma Control Us or We Control Asthma?
    Coordinated Approach Needed to Overcome ...
    Lung Health Needs Attention
    Should Tuberculosis (TB)-Preventive Therapy ...
    Responding to TB, HIV, COPD and Tobacco ...
    "Good Health Is India's Basic Need": Easier ...
    Int'l Day Against Drug Abuse, Illicit ...
    World Now in Early Days of 2009 Influenza ...
    One-Third Preventable Deaths Can Be Averted by ...
    Politics: Allocation of Resources
    If G20 Agrees, Health Financing Might Come ...
    Neglect of Tuberculosis Control among ...
    Is It Ethical to Provide TB Treatment without ...
    Youth against Cross-border Tobacco Advertising ...
    Vitamin A Supplements Reduces Child Mortality ...
    Mayawati Ji, Why Did We Get Bulldozers Instead ...
    How Will the World Begin to See TB Care as a ...
    Will recession impede TB care and control?
    Kala Azar Patients Lack Adequate Diagnosis and ...
    Further Dilution of Pictorial Tobacco Warnings ...
    Village Community Radio Will Give Voice to ...
    Citizens of India-Pakistan Stand Up for Peace
    Another Blow to Enforcement of Tobacco Control ...
    Addressing HIV and IDU Issues Vital for TB ...
    Effective Tobacco Control Policies in Nepal ...
    Countries Unite against Tobacco Industry Abuse
    India Agrees That Tobacco Industry Puts ...
    National Partnership for TB Care and Control ...
    Need to Refrain from Communal Politics in India
    India Embraces Smoke-free Policies on ...
    3rd Global Tobacco Treaty Action Guide 2008 ...
    Uphold Public Health over Corporate Interests
    Bringing Diabetes to Light
    Andhra Pradesh Should Gear Up to Enforce ...
    Pictorial Warnings on Tobacco Products in ...
    HDN and the International HIV/AIDS Alliance ...
    'We Reject Indo-US Nuclear Deal' Campaign ...
    Help Aamir Khan to Keep Promises and Quit ...
    Indian Court Serves Notice to Amitabh Bachchan ...
    NAPM Opposes the Indo-US Nuclear Deal
    Overcoming State Suppression, Prof. Agarwal ...
    10-Day Fast in Support of Dr. Binayak Sen ...
    Will South Korea Reaffirm Commitment to TB/HIV ...
    Activists to Fast for 10 Days Demanding ...
    Enforce Existing Tobacco Control Legislations ...
    Scaling Up of MPOWER Tobacco Control ...
    Kanpur Land-Sharks Intimidate RTI Activist by ...
    'You Can Control Your Asthma': Dr. Nils Billo
    Will Indian Government Arrest Those Who ...
    Asthma Control Is Appalling in Most Countries
    After 1.5 Years, Right-to-Information Act ...
    Democracy Weeps in Nandigram: NHRC and NCW ...
    Enforcement of Tobacco Ban in Prisons Uphill ...
    Displaced People in India Announce a Massive ...
    Climate Change Has Implications on Public ...
    Who Will Pay US$ 80 Billion to Halve the No. ...
    Can South Korea Stop Drug-resistant TB Too?
    Rising Tobacco Use among Women
    Japan's Obstructionist Position on Illicit ...
    Smoking in Indian Movies Gets Challenged
    'The Padyatra' Linking the Land-rights, ...
    Journalist Reporting on Under-represented ...
    Diabetes Wake-up Call after Years of Neglect ...
    Stop Dow Recruitment in IIT Chennai
    Round-the-clock Burma Vigil in Parliament ...
    Burma Unifies People's Voices in North-East ...
    Mounting Public Pessure against Dams in ...
    Will Independent Commission Increase Judicial ...
    India Ranks 72 in 180 Nations on Corruption ...
    Strengthen Health Systems to Control Dengue: ...
    Young Professionals in US Bring Agri-issues ...
    Mayawati Government to Expedite Justice in ...
    Court Reprimands MP Government for Arresting ...
    News of Three Deaths at IIT Kanpur Confirmed
    Anti-AFSPA Protestors Demand "Free Burma and ...
    Fate of 25,000 Families Hinge on Sept. 20 NCA ...
    IHP Launched to Strengthen Health Systems
    India's Under-nutrition Levels among Highest
    After 20 Years, RTI Is Another Blow to ...
    Public Pressure Mounts against Arrest of ...
    Dhaka Univ. Faculty, Students Beaten Up, ...
    Tobacco Industry Succeeds in Diluting Indian ...
    Activists Oppose the Indo-US Nuclear Deal
    Women Farmers Fast against Reliance ...
    Pepsi to Print 'Public Water Source' on Labels
    Youth Appeal to UN to Prioritise Health
    UN Mid-Point Progress Report on Development ...
    148 Nations Meet as Parties to Global Tobacco ...
    Alert to Protect Global Tobacco Treaty before ...
    Patil in for President's Race Not Only because ...
    Hashimpura Survivors Find Hope in RTI Act
    Hyderabad Blast: Wake Up Call for Secular India
    Health Ministry Alert on Iron-Deficiency ...
    Medical Students Need to Quit Tobacco First
    Integrate Tobacco Cessation in Healthcare ...
    1st Time Indians Get 2007 Human Rights Prize
    Responding to Diverse HIV Healthcare Needs
    Why Should S. Korea Enforce Tobacco Treaty?
    34 Cases of Avian Influenza Found in Egypt
    With Inadequate Cessation Services, What Will ...
    Another Death of Pregnant Woman with HIV Is ...
    Don't Forget The Rise in Violence Against ...
    A Ray of Hope for Medical University Teaching
    Alarm Bells Sound in Nandigram for Indian ...
    Activists Challenge Corporate Control of Water ...
    Vietnam's TB Programs Face New Challenges
    Neglect of Hepatitis C Leaves People with HIV ...
    Tobacco Industries Disregard Nepal's ...
    Link between Tobacco Use and Films
    Integration of TB and HIV Services Urgently ...
    More of the Same Will Brew Drug Resistance
    Is a Priority, Says Indian President Kalam
    Head Injuries Soar Unabatedly: Prof. Rama Kant
    Groundwater Belongs to People, Not to Firms
    Tobacco Shown in Movies Influences Children
    Water Is a Fundamental Human Right
    Global Tobacco Treaty Should Be Implemented
    Founder of Surgical Oncology in India Dies
    HIV Prevention Must Address Women' Needs
    Staying Alive with HIV

Other Articles by Bobby Ramakant
     WHO Award Shines Spotlight on Thailand's ...
     When People with HIV Can Live Normal Lives ...
     UK's Decision to Consider Vaccinated Indians ...
     Step Up Pace Globally If Universal ...
     Will Inclusion and Accountability Take ...


Bobby Ramakant, who serves as The Seoul Times' Asia correspondent, is a member of NATT, Network for Accountability of Tobacco Transnationals, and edits Weekly MONiTOR series, reporting violations of tobacco control policies as a senior public health and development journalist. He writes for newspapers in 11 countries. He is the recepient of World Health Organization (WHO)'s Award for the year 2008. He can be reached at bobbyramakant@yahoo.com)

 

back

 

 

 

The Seoul Times, Shinheung-ro 36ga-gil 24-4, Yongsan-gu, Seoul, Korea 04337 (ZC)
Office: 82-10-6606-6188 Email:seoultimes@gmail.com Publisher & Editor: Joseph Joh
Copyrights 2000 The Seoul Times Company  ST Banner Exchange