Finding and Treating Tuberculosis
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This is Gwen Outen with the VOA Special English Health Report.
Experts on [A]tuberculosis[/A] say the best treatment program for this lung disease is DOTS. DOTS is directly observed [A]treatment[/A], short-course. This means health care workers watch[A] patients[/A] take their medicine every day. This is a way to make sure patients take medicine long enough to kill the germs that cause TB.
China recently reported a drop in tuberculosis rates because of DOTS. There has also been some success in the Philippines. But [A]public health centers[/A] identified only sixty percent of TB cases in the country. So Philippine health officials have decided also to include private doctors in the program.
Experts hope such [A]efforts[/A] will reduce the spread of the kind of tuberculosis that resists common drugs. People with drug-resistant TB must take [A]medicines[/A] that cost much more. And they must take these for eighteen to twenty-four months.
Normally, patients with TB must take medicine for six to eight months. The DOTS program calls for direct [A]observation[/A] for the first two months at least.
Health experts say most people treated for TB are cured. But getting people to take all their medicine is not the only problem. Around the world, experts say only thirty-seven percent of TB cases are ever identified.
The World Health Organization is trying new ways to educate people to see a health worker as soon as they show signs of the disease. Earlier this year, a program started in Kenya. The program is called COMBI, which means Communication for Behavioral Impact.
Kenyan schoolchildren take home information about TB. People also get [A]information[/A] through television and in movies and when they go into businesses. Colorful signs identify health care centers where people can be [A]tested[/A].
Doctors say people who have a cough that does not go away after three weeks should get tested for TB. [A]Infected people[/A] spread the [A]bacteria [/A]through the air when they cough. Also, people with TB often have [A]hiccups[/A] that will not stop. They may sweat at night and feel very hot.
Yet there are [A]reasons[/A] why people do not go to a doctor when they have signs of TB. They may not think a [A]cough[/A] is very serious. They may need to keep working even though they are sick. Finding a doctor may not be easy. In the words of a W.H.O. report, "Knowing what to do is [A]different[/A] from doing it."
This VOA Special English Health Report was written by Karen Leggett. This is Gwen Outen.