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Friday, May 18, 2012

TB in Sabah killing four people weekly


Illegal immigrants in Sabah are being blamed for the fast spreading tuberculosis disease which was once almost eradicated.

KOTA KINABALU: The uncontrolled influx of illegal immigrants into Sabah has spawned a lethal infectious disease, once thought to have been almost eradicated.

Tuberculosis, more commonly known as TB, is killing people on a weekly basis in Sabah and the spread of the disease is being pinned on the immigrants who have been pouring over its borders for years.

According to the health authorities here, Sabah is the most afflicted state in the country with at least four people dying weekly from the dreaded disease.

That works out to about 200 deaths every year from the disease that was once thought to have been almost eradicated in Sabah.

The State Health Department said an average of 10 people are diagnosed with TB in Sabah every week and most of them are foreigners.

“Kota Kinabalu ranks the highest, followed by Tawau and Sandakan,” Sabah Health Department assistant director (TB/Leprosy), Dr Richard Avoi told a health care seminar here over the weekend.

The spread of TB, he said, is known to be closely associated with poverty, overcrowding, alcoholism, malnutrition and drug abuse.

“It spreads easily in overcrowded, poorly ventilated places and among people who are undernourished,” Dr Avoi said.

All Sabah’s major towns are fertile grounds for the disease. They all have a large population of poor, illegal immigrants from the southern Philippines and Indonesia living in shanty towns that have mushroomed in the state.

Infectious strain

What makes it worse, according to Dr Avoi, is that about 17% of the immigrant TB patients and about 3% of locals suffering from the disease do not complete their six-month treatment regimen leading to them being more drug-resistant and for the disease to keep resurfacing.

The BCG vaccine injection given to babies is no guarantee that one would not contract TB.

Other than pulmonary TB which infects the lungs, the other strains of the disease infect the bones, skin, lymph nodes and even the brain.

The authorities official confirmation of the increasing threat of the disease building to epidemic proportions has raised fears that certain areas such as the crowded wet markets, shopping complexes and cinemas that are popular meeting spots for the immigrant population, will become “no-go zones” soon.

Those frequenting these places are already vulnerable if they fail to take extra care, health officials have long warned.

The risk is high considering that TB, a contagious bacterial infection that involves the lungs, but can spread to other organs, can infect people of any age and once infected, the whole family and acquaintances in contact with the carrier is at risk.

“Being about three feet away from someone with TB can increase chances of getting pulmonary TB,” Dr Avoi told the seminar.

According to him, there would be a very high risk of getting TB if one is, for instance, inside a long-distance bus with someone with TB onboard.

This makes traveling by bus to the east coast towns like Tawau, Lahad Datu, Semporna and Sandakan to Kota Kinabalu, a journey of about eight hours, a risky business.


Curable disease

James Bagah, the president of Consumer Protection Association of Sabah (Caps) said the revelation is alarming.

“We advise people to avoid if possible places where they think they would be exposed to infectious diseases including the dreaded TB,” he said in an immediate reaction to the prevalence of the disease when contacted by FMT.

Bagah also said the authorities should increase TB awareness talks as many were not aware of the growing threat of the disease in the state.

“I am concerned as there seem to be more and more people coughing nowadays. You can see it for yourself everywhere … I hope its is just the weather and not something serious like TB,” he added.

While the “good news” about TB is that it is curable, the problem Sabah is facing is that its health care services are overwhelmed and border control is almost non-existent.

By Luke Rintod

64 comments:

  1. This TB outbreak is getting serious. The public must be ward to avoid crowded places or any places that could be exposed to infectious diseases.

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    Replies
    1. Prevention is better than cure.

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    2. Kematian akibat TB berlaku setiap minggu. penyakit ni menjadi semakin serius.

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    3. kalau ada batuk2 atau simptom2 lain harus segera membuat pemeriksaan di hospital.

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    4. Jika ada simptom2, segera dapatkan rawatan.

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    5. Tindakan harus diambil untuk menghentikan rebak secara mendadak.

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  2. "This makes traveling by bus to the east coast towns like Tawau, Lahad Datu, Semporna and Sandakan to Kota Kinabalu, a journey of about eight hours, a risky business."


    People will need to opt for airline service instead if they want to lower the risk of getting infected.

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    Replies
    1. Tapi bukan semua berkemampuan sangat guna kapal terbang.

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    2. tambang kapal mahal..masalah ini amat menyusahkan..

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  3. ini amat membincangkan penyakit ini mudah berjangkit, sebaiknya elakkan berada di tempat terlalu ramai orang. pakai penutup muka lagi baik.

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  4. Apa yang PATI tidak sumbangkan di Sabah ni? Jenayah, penyakit, masalah kebersihan etc..

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    Replies
    1. Semua yang negatif dibawa oleh PATI. memang membawa masalah saja masuk negara orang.

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    2. tiada sumbangan positif pun kehadiran PATI di sabah..

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  5. Sabah merupakan negeri yang mencatatkan bilangan kes tibi tertinggi di Malaysia.hmm..

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    Replies
    1. perkara ini amat membimbangkan kerana ianya melibatkan kesihatan umum..langkah penyelesaian harus diambil dengan segera.

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    2. Elak ke tempat2 yang ramai orang, kalau pergi tengok wayang pakai topeng muka untuk tutup hidung mulut.

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    3. Langkah2 pencegahan harus di ambil sebelum belaku jangkitan.

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  6. apa tindakan daripada kementerian kesihatan malaysia?

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    Replies
    1. Saya rasa kementerian Kesihatan Malaysia perlulah mewujudkan kesedaran mengenai penyakit TB ini supaya rakyat tahu apakah simtom TB dan boleh mendapatkan rawatan lebih awal.

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  7. People should try to avoid going to places where there are huge crowds as those are places where TB can spread easily.

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    Replies
    1. Especially places where there are many PATI, such as the Philippine market and Sinsuran.

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  8. penyakit ini makin merebak, kita kena berhati-hati.

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  9. The government should take this issue seriously to avoid the spreading of TB until it becomes worse and out of control.

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  10. Something has to be done before it becomes a serious epidemic.

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    Replies
    1. harap pekara ini akan dapat ditangani dengan sebaiknya.

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  11. Ministry of health is supposed to find a way to avoid and eradicate such disease.

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    Replies
    1. I am sure Ministry of health will take smart action.

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  12. If the health care services are overwhelmed and border control is almost non-existent, what then happens to the public?

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  13. Prevention they say is better than cure…how can we prevent this from affecting the public?

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    Replies
    1. It is spread through the air when people who have an active TB infection cough, sneeze, or otherwise transmit their saliva through the air. Most infections are asymptomatic and latent, but about one in ten latent infections eventually progresses to active disease which, if left untreated, kills more than 50% of those so infected. (Info from Wikipedia)

      Try to avoid going to crowded places if possible and get treatment immediately if found symptoms relating to TB.

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  14. The classic symptoms of active TB infection are a chronic cough with blood-tinged sputum, fever, night sweats, and weight loss. A wide range of other symptoms are also possible. Once discovered these symptoms, the best thing to do is go to the doctor immediately. TB is curable only if done as soon as possible.

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  15. Kalau ada yang batuk2 tu, kita yang tidak batuk tutup2 hidung mulut. nanti tejangkit yang tidak sepatutnya

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  16. Memandangkan PATI cuma menyumbangkan masalah ssahaja kepada Sabah?

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    Replies
    1. Ini juga golongan ramai menyeru PATI harus dihantar balik.

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    2. harap penyelesaian terhadap masalah pati akan dapat dibuat segera.

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  17. Mereka yang terjangkit harus juga diberi perubatan yang wajar.

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    Replies
    1. ya, mereka yang dijangkiti harus mengikut nasihat pakar.

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  18. Jika tiada tindakan yang wajar, virus ini akan merebak secara berganda-ganda. Ini adalah amat serius.

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  19. Langkah yang pertama harus asingkan golongan yang terjangkit.

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  20. Menteri Kesihatan harus bertindak supaya tidak terus merebak.

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  21. Golongan awam juga harus sedar kepentingan untuk menjaga diri dan elekkan diri dari orang ramai.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. setiap individu jug perlulah berusaha untuk menjaga kesihatan diri dengan sebaiknya.

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  22. Sebelum tidak terkawal, harus juga bertindak.

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  23. Semoga masalah penyakit TB ini akan dapat ditangani.

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  24. kempen kesedaran pelu dilakukan dengan lebih banyak mengenai pencegahannya.

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  25. ba, senang sudah polis imigresen buat serbuan.. dapatkan saja maklumat, dimana ada TB disitu ada PATI..

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  26. Malaysia is a country with the intermediate burden of tuberculosis (TB).

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  27. TB is still a public-health problem in Sabah, one of the two states in East Malaysia. In 2007, the state of Sabah contributed slightly more than 3,000 of 16,129 new and relapse cases reported in the country.

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  28. It has a notification rate of two and a half times that of the country's.

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  29. Very few studies on TB have been conducted in Sabah, and there is little documentation on the perceptions of TB patients and the community about TB, healthcare-seeking behaviour, and impact of TB on the people of Sabah.

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  30. A qualitative study was conducted in 2006 in seven districts in Sabah to assess the knowledge and perceptions of TB patients and the community about TB, also to know the experiences of healthcare services, and to examine the impact of TB on patients and families.

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  31. Purposive sampling identified 27 TB patients and 20 relatives and community members who were interviewed using a set of questions on knowledge, perceptions about TB, healthcare-seeking behaviour, and impact of TB.

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  32. A further 11 health staff attended informal discussions and feedback sessions. Most interviews were taped and later translated.

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  33. Data were analyzed using thematic content analysis. Ninety-six percent of the respondents did not know the cause of TB.

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  34. Some thought that TB occurred due to a 'tear' in the body or due to hard work or inflammation while others thought that it occurred due to eating contaminated food or due to sharing utensils or breathing space with TB patients.

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  35. Although the germ theory was not well-known, 98% of the respondents believed that TB was infectious.

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  36. Some patients did not perceive the symptoms they had as those of TB. The prevailing practice among the respondents was to seek modern medicine for cure.

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  37. Other forms of treatment, such as traditional medicine, were sought if modern medicine failed to cure the disease.

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  38. TB was still a stigmatizing disease, and the expression of this was in both perceived and enacted ways. TB also affected the patients in various aspects of their lives, such as psychosocial, physical, financial and life practices.

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  39. Patients who were farmers complained that they did not recover fully from their disease and were not, thus, able to continue with their previous work.

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  40. Patients changed their life practices, such as not sharing their utensils, had a separate sleeping area, and practised social distancing.

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  41. On the other hand, most health workers were unaware of the effects of TB on their patients and that knowledge of their patients on TB was inadequate.

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  42. There is a need to understand the reasons for the misconceptions about TB and to address the lack of knowledge on TB through health education.

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  43. Patients need to recognize the symptoms of TB early so that prompt treatment can be initiated, and patients need to be convinced of its curability.

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