25 March 2022 10:18 am Views - 610
Diagnosing and treating TB
For diagnosis of TB, multiple tests may be done such as blood tests, chest x-rays, sputum examination, PCR and TB culture. Dr. Karunatillake also mentioned that a drug regime for 6 months or more would be given to treat the patient. “It is very important for the patient to take the medicines properly and this is monitored by health workers. If at the end of the treatment, the bacteria is not detected during the tests - then we can say the patient is cured.”
Dr. Senanayake mentioned that the treatment and testing is provided free of charge at the district chest clinics and that the Social Services Ministry has allocated a monthly allowance during the course of the treatment for those from disadvantaged backgrounds.
TB drug resistance
The treatment regime has to be strictly followed to prevent resistance to the drugs. If resistance is formed, it could lead to multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) which is harder to treat. “To cure MDR-TB, more drugs have to be used for a prolonged period of time - up to maybe 2 years! And a person with MDR-TB can transmit MDR-TB to another person, which would lead to increased cases causing a public health crisis,” Dr Karunatillake noted, adding that Sri Lanka has a small percentage of those with MDR-TB and the patients were being carefully monitored.
TB testing for migration
She also shared that the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) conducts TB tests for those wishing to migrate or study in certain countries as it is a requirement for the acquisition of visa to these countries for long-term stay.
Eradicating TB, the way forward
NPTCCD conducts screening programmes for vulnerable populations (immunocompromised people, prisoners) and also looks forward to widen the scope of treatment for Latent TB so that treatment is accessible to everyone with Latent TB. Dr. Karunatillake also urged people to test for TB and ensure early treatment as it was a curable disease. “Due to the childhood BCG vaccine, miliary TB and TB meningitis is not seen. But pulmonary TB can be cured if detected early and if treatment is followed properly,” shared Dr. Senanayake.