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Feb 27

Benjamin Dahl: Sleeping Sickness is Major East African Killer When Undiagnosed

Posted on Saturday, February 27, 2010 in Neglected Tropical Diseases by blog editor

Human African Trypanosomiasis (HAT) is a parasitic disease transmitted through the bite of the tsetse fly and is found in 36 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, including Tanzania. HAT is commonly known as sleeping sickness. Many people are surprised to hear that it is still a problem and in many ways it has been forgotten since sleeping sickness now usually only sickens poor farmers or honey gathers living at the end of the road. Occasionally a tourist on safari will also get sick but that is rare. The name sleeping sickness may sound benign but in reality it is devastating disease, first often misdiagnosed as malaria, HIV/AIDS or mental illness. Untreated it is 100% fatal.Ben Dahl

From 2002 until 2009 I worked with a hospital in Kaliua, Tanzania (about 90 km west of Tabora, in central TZ) to establish sub-regional surveillance for HAT. The area around Tabora is the historical foci for sleeping sickness in TZ though cases had dropped off dramatically from the epidemics seen in the first half of the 20th century. In the late 1990s there started to
be an increase in cases and by 2002 there were more cases than had been seen in a generation. The investigation showed that this was linked to people moving into areas where they had more contact with tsetse flies and the wild animals that are the host of the parasite in East Africa as well as a lack of control efforts against the tsetse.

The project demonstrated the need for more control and better efforts to treat those infected with the parasite. The Ministry of Health and the local health center have responded and the number of cases is starting to decline. This situation will have to monitored and health officials will have to remain vigilant in order to prevent new epidemics. The primary challenge will be that the rural population has limited access to the specialized treatment needed for HAT.

Benjamin Dahl is an epidemiologist with the US Centers for Disease Control, based in Atlanta, GA.

Feb 24

Habari — Liz Pavlovich: Going Blind “Quietly”

Posted on Wednesday, February 24, 2010 in Neglected Tropical Diseases by blog editor

A disease that renders a person blind by the age of 30 or 40 typically begins its vanquish during childhood; the disease’s slow progression purports the nickname the “quiet disease.” In Tanzania, it is estimated that Trachoma has blinded nearly 50,000 people. Another two million adults have active cases of the neglected tropical disease that could result in the loss of sight if untreated.

As you can imagine, blindness makes a person feel helpless. A blind person is dependent on his family or others for food, shelter, water, and other necessities because he cannot work. This often leaves the person isolated and stigmatized.

The disease is categorized by slow disintegration of parts of the eye, mainly the cornea and conjunctiva, as a result of repeated infections and scar tissue build up. As the disease progresses, the eyelid will turn inwards (trichiasis) causing extreme discomfort. Loss of vision will become permanent shortly thereafter if surgical measures are not taken.

The disease is highly contagious and bacteria from the eye are transferred by hands, on clothing and through flies that land on people’s faces. The disease is particularly prevalent in places where people are not able to wash their hands and faces regularly in order to remove the infectious bacteria. It predominantly affects rural communities in poor countries because people live in close proximity to their livestock, which attract flies that can easily transmit the infection from one person to another.

The World Health Organization and organizations such as the International Trachoma Initiative have devised a strategy called “SAFE” to prevent, control and eradicate trachoma in the 55 affected countries. SAFE is an acronym that stands for:

S = Surgery- to correct advanced stages of the disease.

A = Antibiotics- to treat active infection by a single dose of Zithromax & tetracycline.

F = Face washing- to prevent disease transmission.

E = Environmental change- to increase access to clean water and improve sanitation.

With the SAFE strategy and the growing accessibility of health care workers in Tanzania, I hope that the population’s health knowledge will increase so that simple health-supporting behaviors are adopted, such as the consistent washing of children’s faces, and sight saving treatment and care from trained professionals. Working with the administration at Bugando university, a medical school in Tanzania, I am encouraged by the students training to become doctors, nurses and pharmacists who are dedicated to preventing and treating diseases like Trachoma. tanz show (48)

Habari – News From Bugando – is a periodic blog posting by Liz Pavlovich, a Program Officer for the Touch Foundation based in Mwanza Tanzania. Since 2004, the Touch Foundation (touchfoundation.org) has been working with Tanzanian partners to address the healthcare worker shortage by expanding the Bugando regional medical training college and teaching hospital. Bugando’s University is the second largest of five institutions training medical doctors in the country. It also trains health workers in seven other disciplines – post-graduate MDs, nurses, assistant medical officers, radiographers, pharmacists and laboratory technologists. The school is now training 900 students.

Caption: In rural Tanzania, most people keep livestock very close to their homes. The animals attract flies and carry worms that can cause diseases such as Trachoma, in humans.

Feb 15

Habari — Liz Pavlovich: Fighting worm infection with community education

Posted on Monday, February 15, 2010 in Neglected Tropical Diseases by blog editor

The environment in the areas surrounding Lake Victoria in northeastern Tanzania is ideal for the spread of the chronic disease, schistosomiasis. Human populations live in regular contact with fresh water.

The lifecycle of the three species of worms that cause schistosomiasis alternates between freshwater snails and human hosts. The disease burden around Lake Victoria, the region that Bugando’s hospital and university serve, is largely rural. The disease affects thousands of children, men and women, causing liver and spleen damage, genital lesions that increase the spread of HIV, and learning disabilities. Organizations such as CONTRAST are tackling this disease with preventive, diagnostic and curative techniques.

Mwanza Poverty

The economy of the communities around Lake Victoria is based on small-scale fishing and farming, putting people in constant contact with the potential water-borne diseases.

Earlier this month, I attended a presentation at the National Institute for Medical Research in Mwanza entitled “Socio-Economic Status of One Community Population Before and One Year After Schistosomiasis Control Intervention.”  The basic assumption of the presentation was that communities are less productive if they are riddled by diseases such as schistosomiasis and, therefore, a community health intervention would increase productivity and, likewise, wealth. Changes in simple behaviors tremendously reduce people’s risk and change their lives. In this study, community health workers taught the community about prevention strategies such as not bathing in the stagnant lake waters where one is more likely to be infested by the worms released by snails into the water. Wealth decisively increased amongst the 159 households surveyed after one year of education about schistosomiasis in the community, leading the researchers to conclude that the intervention had successfully affected the economic status of the community.

Like malaria and other infectious diseases that overwhelmingly plague the poorest populations in sub-Saharan Africa, schistosomiasis can be prevented at a low cost and with small behavioral changes. With education to target the communities and treatment readily available, we can stop the debilitation and morbidity caused by schistosomiasis.

Habari – News From Bugando – is a periodic blog posting by Liz Pavlovich, a Program Officer for the Touch Foundation who is based in Mwanza Tanzania. Since 2004, the Touch Foundation (www.touchfoundation.org) has been working with Tanzanian partners to address the health worker shortage by expanding the Bugando regional medical training college and teaching hospital. Bugando’s University is the second largest of five institutions training medical doctors in the country. It also trains health workers in seven other disciplines – post-graduate MDs, nurses, assistant medical officers, radiographers, pharmacists and laboratory technologists. The school is now training 900 students.

Feb 5

Emily Bell: Neglected Tropical Diseases Cause Debilitation and Death for Thousands of People in Tanzania

Posted on Friday, February 5, 2010 in Neglected Tropical Diseases by blog editor

The Who Cares? Campaign blog is exploring Neglected Tropical Diseases for the month of February.

Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) are taking a massive toll  in the world’s poorest communities, including in sub-Saharan Africa. The World Health Organization reported these staggering statistics about the impact of NTDs worldwide:

tanzania

  • About 1 billion people are affected by one or more NTDs.
  • Over 1 billion people – one sixth of the world’s population – suffer from one or more neglected tropical diseases.
  • Neglected tropical diseases kill an estimated 534, 000 people worldwide every year.
  • Parasitic and bacterial diseases, known to be neglected, are among some of the most common infections affecting an estimated 2.7 billion people who live on less than US$ 2 a day.
  • There are primarily 14 diseases currently listed as NTDs. Most can be prevented and eliminated. They thrive in places with unsafe water, poor sanitation, and limited access to basic health care. They cause severe pain and life-long disabilities and are often less visible and have a low priority.
  • For example, about 120 million people are infected worldwide with lymphatic filariasis. The disease is the second leading cause of disability worldwide.’
  • Approximately 80 million people are infected with blinding trachoma (of whom 6 million are blind) – the leading cause of blindness worldwide.

In Tanzania, where the Touch Foundation works, NTDs take thousands of lives and debilitate many more each year. Water born illnesses such are particularly common in the Lake Zone.

Vice President of Tanzania, Dr. Ali Mohamed Shein, noted that NTDs “debilitate, deform, blind and even kill many people in the endemic areas. These are serious diseases which inflict and weigh their heavy and corrosive burden on the lives of the affected individuals and communities as well as countries in most parts of Africa. They affect the poorest segment of the population, and their greatest impact is in the way they exacerbate poverty, stigmatize individuals and inhibit communities from being able to care for themselves and their families.”

Emily Bell is Head of Advocacy and Communications for the Touch Foundation.

Jan 20

Callae Snively — Joining the Global Health Movement

Posted on Wednesday, January 20, 2010 in Touch Foundation Volunteers by blog editor

callaeWhen I was a young girl my mother used to call me her little scientist. I was precocious, curious and never short on opinions. I asked questions of anyone and shared my discoveries with everyone. But as I walked through the 9th floor pediatric ward of Weill Bugando Medical Centre in Mwanza, Tanzania, a hospital that is the lifeline for approximately 15 million Tanzanians, I was silent. I couldn’t digest what I had seen, felt, heard and smelled nor could I adequately verbalize the inconsistent feelings of anguish and passion these sentiments aroused. For one of the first times in my life, I was speechless.

As a daughter of a surgical nurse, I have been exposed to medicine and health care all my life. As an individual fascinated by health and science, I pride myself on staying current with global health news. And as an individual passionate about connecting with different cultures and exploring our common humanity, I have continuously sought opportunities to live and work in developing nations. Walking into the Bugando Medical Centre, I mistakenly thought that my health care knowledge and previous international experiences would prepare me for what I was about to see. They did not.

Visiting the Bugando Medical Centre last October was my watershed experience, when I decided that I could not let another day pass without actuating change. This realization has prompted my decision to enroll in a master’s in public health program focusing on global health challenges and pursue a career as an epidemiologist specializing in infectious diseases.

However, one does not have a public health or medical professional to effect global health change. Furthermore, as the recent events in Haiti reiterate, now is the time for all us to become involved and support global health organizations like the Touch Foundation.

We live in a world of unprecedented scientific knowledge and economic wealth, yet preventable afflictions still plague most of the developing world. Today we are capable of utilizing these resources to mitigate global health dieases and bridge the international inequality gap in the promotion of health to a degree that was previously unimaginable. Furthermore, globalization has caused humanity to become interconnected and united like never before necessitating that we act now. It is a necessity that we all become involved in the movement to utilize the resources of today to effect global health change tomorrow.

Jan 11

Raise Awareness about the Touch Foundation through the Shorty Awards

Posted on Monday, January 11, 2010 in Touch Foundation Volunteers by WhoCares

Are you on Twitter? If so, we hope you are following us! The Shorty Awards are “a worldwide effort to engage hundreds of thousands of Twitter users to identify the best people and organizations on Twitter.”

Please take 10 seconds to vote for @Touchfoundation in this year’s Shorty Awards. Just tweet or vote here “I nominate @touchfoundation for a Shorty Award in #nonprofit because…” You have to give a reason, but it can be anything from raising awareness about the shortage of health workers in Africa to our work to fight diseases like AIDS, TB and malaria. Thanks for your help!

Jan 1

Emily Bell — Volunteers, Followers & Supporters All Make a Difference!

Posted on Friday, January 1, 2010 in Touch Foundation Volunteers by ebell

Tory Ervin ran the Marathon for the Touch Foundation in Nov 2009.

Tory Ervin ran the Marathon for the Touch Foundation in Nov 2009.

The Who Cares? Campaign blog will explore volunteer engagement for the month of January.

As the Touch Foundation’s 27 runners who turned out for the ING NYC Marathon in November demonstrated, volunteers really can make a difference!

The Who Cares? Campaign is all about providing outlets for volunteers from near and far to raise money and awareness to address the dire shortage of health workers in Africa.

Whether you are one of our 10,000+ followers on Twitter, spreading the word on Facebook, or attending our Young Leaders events in NY or Michigan, we wanted to take this moment to say thank you!

This month we will be exploring some of the many ways in which volunteers can get involved with the Touch Foundation for 2010. Ideas, thoughts, or comments are welcome as always!

Best wishes for a happy and healthy 2010.

Dec 14

Emily Bell — ‘Tis the season for giving …and reflection

Posted on Monday, December 14, 2009 in Touch Foundation Staff by ebell

Wracking your brain to decide what to buy this holiday season for your friend or loved one? Tired of giving neck ties, slippers, and sweaters you just know they’ll wind up returning?

Consider giving the Gift of Health instead. Together, we can address the severe shortage of doctors, nurses and other health workers in Africa! During this holiday season, as part of our Who Cares? Campaign to mobilize a broad-based army of people who are concerned about healthcare in Africa, we are reaching out to you for our annual holiday appeal.Annual Appeal 2009 Key Image

At the Touch Foundation, we are committed to increasing the number of doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers in Tanzania, a country that faces a gap of almost 90,000 healthcare workers to meet minimal healthcare standards. We have been supporting a medical university and teaching hospital in Mwanza since 2004 to train health workers and ultimately to save lives.

Collectively, if enough supporters like you and your friends feel compelled to give, we can easily reach our grassroots goal of $10,000 this holiday season – if each of our Twitter followers gave just $1 we would reach our goal!

The old adage, “every little bit helps,” is true. Any gift, whether large or small, is important to us, but more important to the people of Tanzania.

Please click here to learn more about how you can send a tribute card in someone’s honor or make a donation to the Touch Foundation.

Emily Bell is Head of Advocacy and Communications at the Touch Foundation.

Dec 9

Habari — Liz Pavlovich: Congratulations to Bugando Graduates!

Posted on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 in Health Workers, News from Bugando, Touch Foundation Staff by blog editor

MD student oath_COn November 21, at a graduation ceremony that was both energetic and dignified, the number of doctors in the Lake Zone region of Tanzania grew by ten percent. It was a joyful day for the 15 million people in this region who rely on the healthcare system that the graduating doctors and other health professionals will serve. But more tangibly, it was a day that immortalized the hopes and dreams of dedicated young individuals.

This was Bugando University’s second graduation ceremony of MD students. In addition to the 24 MD graduates, 166 graduates from Bugando’s seven other health disciplines graduated in 2009: post-graduate MDs, nurses, nurse-anesthetists, assistant medical officers, radiographers, pharmacists and laboratory technologists.

When the graduates received their diplomas, proud friend or family members would run up to the stage, showering their loved ones with festive lay necklaces and gifts so that the graduates returned to their seats with arms full and the classic gowns rendered more colorful. The confidence and hope that the graduates’ mentors, educators, friends and family members have invested in the new health workers were palpable. This optimism filled the space like the band diddling on their electric instruments.

From under the graduation awnings situated on Bugando’s campus, the view was panoramic – the classrooms and hostel were 100 meters behind us, the graduates were seated adjacently, and Bugando’s world-class laboratory (nearly completed) provided the backdrop. The past, present and future of their careers – and the patients whom they will help – was in focus and resonated deeply with everyone that day.

So hongera sana, congratulations to all of the graduates! The effort and dedication to reach this pinnacle moment should be recognized and commended as a tremendous accomplishment.

Habari – News From Bugando – is a periodic blog posting by Liz Pavlovich, a Program Officer for the Touch Foundation who is based in Mwanza Tanzania. Since 2004, the Touch Foundation (www.touchfoundation.org) has been working with Tanzanian partners to address the health worker shortage by expanding the Bugando regional medical training college and teaching hospital. Bugando’s University is the second largest of five institutions training medical doctors in the country. It also trains health workers in seven other disciplines – post-graduate MDs, nurses, assistant medical officers, radiographers, pharmacists and laboratory technologists. The school is now training 900 students.

Dec 1

Emily Bell — Health workers are crucial to the fight against HIV/AIDS

Posted on Tuesday, December 1, 2009 in HIV/AIDS by ebell

The Who Cares? Campaign Blog is exploring HIV/AIDS for the month of December.

The first day of December marks World AIDS Day – a time to remember the 25 million people who have died of AIDS and the estimated 33 million who are living with the HIV virus that causes this disease. It is also a time to redouble our collective efforts to fight this global pandemic.

hiv-aids ribbon

Sixty-seven percent of all people living with HIV are in sub-Saharan Africa. In Tanzania, approximately 6.2 percent of the population, or 1.4 million people, are living with HIV. Considerable progress is being made in Tanzania (e.g., reported drops in HIV incidence among Tanzanian women). But, far too many women, men, and children in Tanzania continue to become infected, remain undiagnosed, or continue to lack access to treatment. HIV/AIDS has also caused a deadly resurgence in tuberculosis and it is critical that the two diseases be tackled in tandem.

The Tanzanian government recognizes that a holistic approach to fighting HIV/AIDS is required to make real progress. This includes behavior and communication strategies to prevent infection and spread of HIV, more community health workers, improved education in schools, reliable drug and food supplies, addressing socio-cultural factors such as women’s rights, and a comprehensive medical approach that addresses  malnutrition, malaria, TB and other complicating factors among HIV-positive individuals.

A radical increase in the number of trained medical professionals – including medical doctors, nurses, assistant medical officers (AMOs), laboratory technicians, among others – is also crucial to the fight against HIV/AIDS.

The US President’s Emergency Program to Fight AIDS (PEPAR) is demonstrating awareness about the urgent need to build the health worker pipeline and has set a target to train 140,000 new health workers over the next five years in the countries hardest hit by the epidemic. Congress included this milestone when lawmakers reauthorized the program last year. At a recent meeting of the Consortium of Universities for Global Health, the US Global AIDS Coordinator, Dr. Eric Goosby, spoke about the need to partner with medical schools to increase their numbers, training capacity and the clinical capability of medical students from Africa and other developing countries (see Science Speaks blog).

The Touch Foundation is supporting Weill Bugando’s university to train more health workers, many of whom are already engaged in responding to the disease on a daily basis at Bugando’s teaching hospital (the second largest in the country). Nearly one quarter of Bugando’s patients test positive for HIV. The Touch Foundation and Abbott Fund’s support to refurbish the laboratory there will enable more timely and effective diagnosis – and therefore treatment – of HIV.

Emily Bell is Head of Advocacy and Communications at the Touch Foundation.