180 Where There Is No Doctor 2011
If you think you might have tuberculosis:
Seek medical help. At the first sign of tuberculosis, go to a health center where the
workers can examine you, and test the stuff you cough up (phlegm or sputum) to see
if you have TB or not. Many governments give TB medicines free. Ask at the nearest
health center. You will probably be given some of the following medicines:
♦ Isoniazid (INH) pills (p. 360)
♦ Rifampin pills (p. 360).
♦ Pyrazinamide pills (p. 361)
♦ Ethambutol pills (p. 361)
♦ Streptomycin injections (p. 361)
It is very important to take the medicines as directed. Treatments may be different
in different countries, but usually the treatment has 2 parts. You will take 4 medicines
for 2 months and then test your sputum. If you are getting better, you will take 2 or 3
medicines for another 4 months. Then you will be tested again to make sure you are
cured. Do not stop taking the medicines, even if you feel better. This can lead to the
illness coming back and infecting you and other people, with a form of TB that is much
harder to cure, multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (see p. 361). To cure TB completely
can take from 6 months to more than a year.
Eat as well as possible: plenty of energy foods and also foods rich in proteins and
vitamins (p. 110 to 111). Rest is important. If possible, stop working and take it easy
until you begin to get better. From then on, try not to work so hard that you become tired
or breathe with difficulty. Try to always get enough rest and sleep.
Tuberculosis in any other part of the body is treated
the same as TB of the lungs, but the treatment may be
longer. This includes TB in the glands of the neck, TB of the
abdomen (see picture on p. 20), TB of the skin (see p. 212),
and TB of a joint (like the knee). A child with severe TB of the
backbone may also need surgery to prevent paralysis (see
Disabled Village Children, Chapter 21).
Tuberculosis is very contagious. It spreads when
someone with TB coughs germs into the air. Anyone,
especially a child, who lives with someone who has TB
runs a great risk of catching the disease.
TB of
the backbone
If someone in the house has TB:
♦ If possible, see that the whole family is tested for TB (Tuberculin test).
♦ Have the children vaccinated against TB with B.C.G. vaccine.
♦ Everyone, especially the children, should eat plenty of nutritious food.
♦ The person with TB should eat and sleep separately from the children, if possible
in a different room, as long as he has any cough at all.
♦ Ask the person with TB to cover his mouth when coughing and not spit on the floor.
♦ Watch for weight loss and other signs of TB in members of the family.
Weigh each person, especially the children, once a month, until you are sure no
one in the household is sick with TB.
TB in family members often starts very slowly and quietly. If anyone in the family
shows signs of TB, have tests done and begin treatment at once.
Early and full treatment is a key part of prevention.