Cough up money for TB, demand protesters
“Cough up money” for TB was the main demand of over a thousand people who marched in Cape Town this afternoon where the 46th Union World Conference on Lung Health, the planet's main annual TB meeting, is being held.
December 3, 2015 - “Cough up money” for tuberculosis
(TB) was the main demand of over a thousand people who marched
from Keizersgracht Street to the Cape Town International
Convention Centre (CTICC) this afternoon. The CTICC is hosting
the 46th Union World Conference on Lung Health, the planet's
main annual TB meeting.
Minister of Health Aaron
Motsoaledi accepted the march
memo*. He thanked the march participants and promised to respond to
memo's demands.
The march was organised by the
Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) and supported by many other
organisations, including Médecins Sans Frontières,
Sonke Gender Justice and the Social Justice Coalition. Many of
the marchers have been ill with TB or had family members who
have been sick or died from the disease.
Nokuphumla
Zintso says two of her grandchildren have had TB. One is still
on treatment. “We are here to fight TB. We want it to be
prioritised," she said.
Songo Gayo said his mother
had TB for many years and he was at the march to empower people
who have TB. "We want to tell people that it is curable. No one
should have to be ashamed for having it. But also we want the
government to put more money into TB because our people are
dying especially in the townships,” he said.
Doctors who have had TB, from an organisation called TB Proof,
also participated in the march. One TB Proof's members, Dr Thato
Mosidi, told the marchers her story. She contracted extensively
drug resistant TB after working in a high risk TB area. "We want
to unmask the stigma because there is so much stigma associated
with TB for everyone. It is what is driving the epidemic. People
don't want to get tested because it's associated with HIV. It's
associated with being poor," she said.
She explained
that TB can happen to anyone, because it is airborne.
TAC Western Cape Chairperson Nompumelelo Mantangane, who is also
a nurse, explained that the purpose of the march is to create
awareness that TB should be treated as an emergency. She said
that many people are dying of the [drug-resistant form of the]
disease because the medicines and diagnostics used to treat the
disease are old. She explained that the drugs used to treat
drug-resistant TB are toxic.
This was the rationale
behind the first demand on the memo: All the BRICS countries
(Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) plus Indonesia
must at least triple their investment in TB research from 2015
to 2016. The memorandum states, “We consider this
reasonable since all these countries are contributing less than
their fair share to the current global investment of $0.7bn per
year – which is a third of the required $2bn.”
Other
demands were that the United States must at least maintain its
current research investment into TB and that the European Union,
particularly Germany, must increase theirs. The memo also called
upon the South African government to declare TB an emergency.
TB
is the largest cause of recorded deaths in South Africa. It has
been made worse by the HIV epidemic. Although most people who
get treated in time can be cured with a relatively easy
six-month drug regimen, an increasing number of patients have
drug-resistant TB. They have to be treated with a cocktail of
drugs, most of which have been poorly tested and have terrible
side effects.
* The memo was endorsed by the following organisations: the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC), the Global Coalition of TB Activists (GCTA), Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), SECTION27, Global TB Community Advisory Board, Treatment Action Group (TAG), TB Proof, HIV i-Base and People’s Health Movement (PHM).
Source:
GroundUp