The World Health Organisation (WHO) has released its
2015 Global TB Report, revealing a million cases of TB among children
worldwide, with 140 000 children dying from tuberculosis in 2014.
“In the past cases have been widely under-estimated. To see these kind of numbers is a huge
advance. Although it sounds negative, you need to know something to do
something about it,” says Anneke Hesseling, the director of the Paediatric TB
Research programme at the DTTC in the university’s Department of Paediatrics
and Child Health.
“The higher number means hopefully there will be more
action while children who have TB will be prioritized and given the attention
they deserve,” said Hesseling.
In South Africa children make up ten percent of all TB
cases. Almost 40,000 cases of childhood TB were reported in South Africa in
2013, says Hesseling, although she estimates that there are probably many more.
“There’s a huge burden of tuberculosis among children
in South Africa. The cases that aren’t reported are often babies or children
who may have died or tend to have severe forms of TB, such as TB meningitis.”
Despite the high statistics, particularly in South
Africa, Hesseling believes there is hope for the better diagnosis and treatment
of childhood TB.
“Tools to better diagnose and treat TB are being
developed, and children are now able to access treatment that they were unable
to before,” Hesseling earlier told a special seminar series on tuberculosis in
children hosted by the Department of Paediatrics and Child Health at
Stellenbosch University.
.
South Africa is also one of a few countries at the
forefront of crucial studies to develop safer, child-friendly TB medication,
and to shorten the duration of treatment from its current six months to four
months.
Multidrug Resistant (MDR) TB is also being tackled,
but Professor Simon Schaaf, childhood MDR TB specialist at the DTTC, says MDR
TB remains a crisis.
“We need new and faster diagnosis and shorter courses
of drugs without injectables, which can lead to hearing loss in children,” he
said.
Prevention is also essential. TB frequently spills
over into children from adults. Hesseling says there’s a great need to spread
the awareness of prevention therapy in the form of the drug, isoniazid, which
can prevent TB in children at risk of being infected by family or household
members.
The ‘Day of Excellence’ set of seminars focused on
children with TB in honour of the work of DTTC director, Professor Nulda
Beyers, and senior specialist and Professor in the Department of Paediatrics
and Child Health, Professor Robert Gie. They are retiring from their current
positions after championing the cause of the prevention and treatment of TB,
particularly in children, over several decades.
“Together with Stellenbosch University colleagues such
as Simon Schaaf and Peter Donald, they worked tirelessly at establishing
childhood TB as an agenda item internationally. They put it on the map at a
time when there was a complete disregard for TB in children,” says Hesseling.
Professor Beyers has been internationally recognized
for her exceptional work in TB and has been ranked by Thomson Reuters as one of
the top 10 most influential TB researchers in the world. She achieved a Gold
award from the South African Medical Research Council last Thursday. The award
is given to scientists ‘who have had a monumental impact on health science in
South Africa.’ Professor Beyers was also
a National Runner-Up in the Department of Science and Technology’s 2015 Women
in Science Awards.
Under her guidance as director of the DTTC, the centre
has grown from small beginnings into having a staff complement of over 400.
Professor Gie was key in establishing WHO
international health guidelines for the treatment of childhood TB. Both
Professors Beyers and Gie have been recognized as Distinguished Professors by
Stellenbosch University.
PREPARED BY KIM CLOETE ON BEHALF OF
THE DEPARTMENT OF PAEDIATRICS AND CHILD HEALTH, FACULTY OF MEDICINE AND HEALTH
SCIENCES, STELLENBOSCH UNIVERSITY. FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO SET UP AN
INTERVIEW, PLEASE CONTACT KIM AT 082 4150736 OR cloetek@yahoo.co.uk
No comments:
Post a Comment