1. الرئيسية
  2. Asia
  3. Indonesia

Housewives help fight TB

Close to 5,000 women have been trained up by Aisyiah to spread the word on TB. With a population of about 240 million, Indonesia has the fourth highest TB burden globally Courtesy of Aisyiyah
Housewives in Cicendo District near Bandung in West Java, Indonesia’s third largest city, are spearheading the fight against tuberculosis (TB) by helping to identify people suspected of having contracted the disease and then referring them to a clinic for treatment.

Activists trained by Aisyiah, the women’s wing of Muhammadiyah, a Muslim organization, work with religious as well as neighbourhood leaders to educate people about TB, and recruit family members to monitor patients’ adherence to their medication. People with TB often experience social stigma and many Indonesians see TB as a disease of the poor.

“One of our problems is that people here are ashamed to admit that they have TB,” said Nunung Resmawati, one of the “community cadres” in Cicendo District. “So we talk to them and try to convince them TB is not a curse, and not something to be ashamed of. It’s a serious disease but one that can be cured.”

Aisyiah says it has trained more than 4,800 people in 18 of the country’s 33 provinces in 41 districts since its Community TB Care programme started in 2009, with assistance from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. So far its cadres have identified more than 24,000 suspected cases, about 3,000 of whom were confirmed to have contracted the disease.

The UN World Health Organization (WHO) notes that about one-third of the global population is infected with TB bacteria, but only a small proportion will become sick, yet it is still one of the world’s top killer infectious diseases. About 95 percent of TB deaths occur in low- and middle-income countries. It is also one of the three main causes of death among women aged 15 to 44.

With a population of about 240 million, Indonesia has the fourth highest TB burden globally, WHO reported in 2012. In 2010 the estimated prevalence per 100 000 people for all forms of TB was 289, with an incidence of 189 cases. According to the Ministry of Health, some 61,000 deaths a year occur as a result of TB.

Many people are still not aware that to be cured, a TB patient must strictly follow a treatment regimen and complete the full course of medicine as prescribed. The strategy recommended by WHO for the detection and cure of TB is the Directly Observed Treatment Short course (DOTS).

But it's not just women that Aisyiah is involving in their efforts. Men are also getting involved.

“I supervised my sister-in-law to take TB drugs regularly and thank God she’s cured now,” said Ridwan, who like many Indonesians goes by only one name. “When she was sick with TB she was pregnant, but she managed to give birth to a healthy baby,” he told IRIN.

Close to 5,000 women are getting the word outIndonesia reduced new TB cases from 343 per 100,000 people in 1990 to 235 in 2009, according to the Health Ministry. However, under its national TB strategy 2010-2014, the goal is to lower the number of new cases to 224 by 2014.

The case detection rate has improved from 20 percent in 2000 to 73.1 percent in 2009, and the country aims to increase the number of TB patients cured by using DOTS from 85 percent to 88 percent by 2014.

TB remains a major health threat in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, said Erlina Burhan, chief pulmonologist at Persahabatan Hospital, the country’s main referral centre for TB patients.

One of more the 4,800 people, mostly women and housewives, trained up to spread the word on TB by Aisyiyah. With a population of about 240 million, Indonesia has the fourth highest TB burden globally
Photo: Courtesy of Aisyiyah
Close to 5,000 women are getting the word out
“In Jakarta the new case finding rate is already high - at above 72 percent - but some of them did not complete their treatment. They could easily infect others,” Burhan said.

Health experts believe around 2 percent of new TB cases in Indonesia are multidrug-resistant (MDR) TB, and that up to 20 percent of people who undergo treatment for recurring TB are suffering from MDR-TB.

However, these data are mainly from DOTS centres. According to WHO, information from the private sector and the non-national TB programme public sector has not yet been recorded by the country’s TB programme, so there are no nationwide statistics on the prevalence of MDR-TB.

MDR-TB occurs when a strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which causes the disease, becomes resistant to isoniazid and rifampin, two of the most powerful first-line drugs. Burhan said MDR-TB patients must take a combination of second-line drugs, which may have more side effects. The treatment typically lasts two years and costs more than for non-resistant TB.

Persahabatan Hospital receives about 1,000 TB patients from Jakarta and neighbouring suburbs every year, and has treated 270 people with MDR-TB since 2009, 40 of whom have completed treatment, while the while the rest are still receiving therapy.

“Some of the patients stopped taking drugs after two months because they felt well and didn’t realize they could get MDR-TB,” Burhan said. “It hard to convince patients to complete treatment.”

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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