Tuberculosis Still Kills 6,000 Every Year in Brazil

Each year 85,000 Brazilians contract tuberculosis, and nearly 6,000 die as a result of this disease. These figures were reported yesterday by the coordinator of the Ministry of Health’s National Tuberculosis Control Program, Tiseney Santos.

Campaign to combat tuberculosis wants to encourage social participation
Tb, tuberculosis, health, Humberto Costa
Reporter: Cecí­lia Jorge


Tuberculosis Still Kills 6,000 Every Year in Brazil
TB


Each year 85,000 Brazilians contract tuberculosis, and nearly 6,000 die as a result of this disease. These figures were reported yesterday by the coordinator of the Ministry of Health’s National Tuberculosis Control Program, Tiseney Santos.


Brazil is one of the 22 countries in which 80% of tuberculosis cases around the world are concentrated.


Social participation ought to be a strong ally of the government in the campaign to combat tuberculosis.


This is the objective of the Brazilian Partnership against Tuberculosis Forum, launched yesterday by the Minister of Health, Humberto Costa.


“Since this is a disease that doesn’t produce epidemics or outbreaks, we convey the false impression to the population that tuberculosis has ceased to be a problem,” the Minister affirms.


The Forum intends to assemble representatives of organized civil society to disseminate information on the disease.


The expectation is to increase the number of people who seek health services to detect and treat the malady.


In the public health network, treatment is free and lasts for six months.


“The big problem nowadays is that many people abandon treatment,” Costa alerts. 12% of tuberculosis patients currently interrupt their treatment.


Carriers of tuberculosis spread the disease through the air, when they speak, sneeze, or cough close to other people.


Doctors advise people who have had a cough with secretions for over three weeks to direct themselves to a health post.


According to the Ministry of Health’s secretary of Heatlh Surveillance, Jarbas Barbosa, the indices of successful treatment are still unsatisfactory.


At present, 73% of the patients under treatment are cured. The goal is to lift this percentage to 85%, above the 80% minimum recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO).


Barbosa adds that 9.5 thousand professionals will be trained by the end of this year. Through 2007 the Ministry plans to spend US$ 42.4 million to control the disease.


Agência Brasil
Translator: David Silberstein

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil Offers Easy Credit to Poor Northeast Farmers

In the first half of this year, Brazil’s National Program for the Strengthening of ...

It’s Cultural. Police Alone Will Not Solve Violence, Says Brazil’s Lula

Brazilians angered by gang violence that rocked South America’s largest city demonstrated across the ...

Brazil: It Ends the UNCTAD of the Discontent

For the Secretary of Environment and Development from the state of Amazonas, in Brazil, ...

A Gallery of Distinguished Brazilians: the Educationalists

“O navio negreiro” (“The Slave Ship”) was written by the poet Castro Alves in ...

Chavez Spreads Petrodollars Throughout Brazil and South America to Fend US Invasion

Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez arrived late Tuesday night, August 9, in Montevideo, capital of Uruguay, as ...

Brazil Wants Kyoto to Protect Forests

Actions to prevent illegal deforestation should be one of the mechanisms of the Kyoto ...

Brazil? Which Brazil?

Brazil has several ethnicities and they are as complex, contradictory, and creative as Brazilians ...

Soybean Farmers in Brazil Promised They Will Sow Oil

Brazilian oil company Petrobras, plans on starting the industrial scale production of the H-Bio ...

Brazilian Baby Abandoned in Lake Gets Too Many of Would-Be Adoptive Parents

Doctors released a 2-month-old girl from a hospital "in perfect health" Monday, January 30, ...

Good Job News Not Enough to Cheer Brazilian Markets

Brazilian shares mostly declined, as global crude oil prices closed above US$ 55 a ...