International coronavirus 'lockdown' encroaches on TB epidemic control
Though it may be associated with the past in popular culture, tuberculosis (TB) is still the world’s most fatal infectious disease, killing an estimated 1.5 million people each year.
Substantial disruptions in tuberculosis care have taken place
during the coronavirus pandemic and are increasing mortality
from the disease, according to a report published by civil
society organizations involved in global tuberculosis
mitigation.
The Impact of COVID-19 on the TB Epidemic: A Community
Perspective was compiled by a coalition of TB stakeholder groups such as
The Global TB Caucus, Stop TB Partnership, TB People, McGill
University, and more.
The report is a detailed survey of communities affected by
TB around the world. Results paint a bleak and troubling
picture:
- More than 70% of healthcare workers and advocates surveyed reported a decrease in the number of people coming to health facilities for TB testing.
- Program officers surveyed reported significant drops in tuberculosis notification: 88% in Global Fund supported countries, 68% in the USA.
- In Kenya, 50% of people with TB reported having trouble finding transport to care and in India, 36% of people with TB reported health facilities they normally visit closed.
- In Kenya, 70% of respondents reported not receiving enough support amid the pandemic.
“For TB, COVID-19 related lockdowns came in very handy,
leaving people with no food, no work, no money, no health care.
The various barriers we faced to access TB services were
compounded. What a gift for TB – and what a
disaster for people affected by TB,” wrote human rights
lawyer and public health consultant Timur Abdullaev.
Abdullaev speaks from personal experience, as he was drawn into
advocacy and consulting after having contracted tuberculosis
himself.
Many within TB advocacy and research are deeply concerned by the
reversal of progress brought on in recent months.
“If we were climbing a mountain before COVID-19, that
mountain has now become Mount
Everest. This means we need to work extra hard to mitigate the
damage and stay focused on TB for the long haul,” wrote
Madhukar Pai, MD, PhD, Director of the McGill International TB
Centre.
Yet according to an anonymous health care worker from Morocco
quoted in the report, “if we had used a quarter of the
resources allocated to COVID... we would have eliminated TB a
long time ago.”
Even the impact of public health messaging against COVID-19 in
areas with high tuberculosis prevalence appears problematic,
given comparative risks. About half of the population in Kenya
is under 35 and thus at low risk for more than mild SARS-CoV-2
infection, but many people avoided care due to fear of
COVID-19.
“For instance, more than half of people with TB in Kenya
and India reported fear of contracting COVID-19 at a health
facility, and more than half of people with TB in Kenya
indicated experiencing feelings of shame because of the similar
symptoms of both respiratory diseases,” Blessina Kumar, a
member of the World Health Organization Civil Society Task Force
on TB, said.
The survey included 159 people with TB from Kenya and 58 from
India who reported significant challenges in accessing TB
services during the pandemic and associated lockdowns.
Key barriers included difficulty finding transport to access TB
care, changes in TB services, and fear of contracting COVID-19
during a healthcare visit. People also reported increased stigma
due to newfound fear stoked among the public of coughing and
other respiratory symptoms.
The patients surveyed expressed feelings of abandonment as well
as urgent need of nutritional, economic and psychosocial
support.
“[I am] sometimes rejected by family members because they
think [I have the] same signs of COVID-19. [I’m] even
thinking of moving from the family,” remarked one person
with TB in Kenya.
A team of 73 TB researchers also expressed issues directly
related to the so-called ‘lockdown’ policies.
Issues included “diversion of personnel, equipment, and
funding of COVID-19 over TB” to the point that it appeared
tuberculosis infrastructure was being repurposed to suit
political demands for a laser-focus on COVID-19.
“Survey participants repeatedly noted existing lab space
and infrastructure being closed during lockdowns or repurposed
for COVID-19. Similarly, respondents experienced reduced access
to research participants due to immobility during lockdowns.
There is unified demand from TB researchers for additional and
continued resources for TB, and for research investments in
COVID-19 to be leveraged for TB. TB research and infrastructure
are currently being leveraged for COVID-19-related
research,” authors of the report wrote.
Once the initial few weeks of “flattening the curve”
were over, some researchers were surprised that the work they
were doing on TB was suddenly gone.
“Our team dropped our TB projects to work on COVID and it
has been hard to resuscitate the projects now…it was nice
to contribute to COVID while our TB projects were on hold, but
it is clear that our TB projects have suffered,” a
Canadian researcher remarked.
Other community reports validated and deepened these
complaints:
- Around Global Fund supported countries, 59% of advocates reported seeing resources for people with TB diverted to respond to COVID-19.
- In the US, 87% of TB policy and program officers reported being reassigned to COVID-19.
- Over half of health care workers globally reported reductions in TB services where they worked.
Health care workers and advocates also pointed to the need for a
more serious human rights perspective when it comes to mass
quarantine.
An advocate from Kenya was particularly salient on the
matter:
“From conversations with community health workers, there
is a lot of stigma around COVID. 'You can not cough in peace,'
one said related as any cough is mistaken as COVID, and when you
become a suspected case, you are forcefully quarantined. There
is a need for more education on human rights around
COVID.”
The full report is available
here.
Source:
Contagion