Skip to main content

MSF is first to treat children with MDR-TB

For the first time, children in Tajikistan with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) are receiving treatment for the life-threatening disease. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has opened a new ward in Machiton hospital, near the capital Dushanbe, where it plans to treat 60 to 100 children with TB, and their family members, over the next three months.

“We call our programme ‘family TB’,” says Nana Zarkua, MSF medical coordinator. “It’s not uncommon in Tajikistan for several members of one extended family to be sick, and what makes our programme special is the family approach to the problem.”

“For MSF, a child often serves as an entry point into a family with TB,” says Zarkua. “When we identify a sick child, we can provide the family with information on how to reduce the spread of the disease, and we can trace contacts within the family to see who else might be infected.”

Systematic neglect

In Tajikistan – one of the poorest countries of the former Soviet bloc – poverty and an underfunded health system have led to people with DR-TB being systematically neglected. Undiagnosed, untreated and highly infectious, the disease spreads quickly among their friends and relatives, destroying families and creating stigma and fear.

Children have been the most neglected of all, and until MSF launched its new programme, not a single child in Tajikistan had received treatment for MDR-TB. “The common belief among the local TB doctors,” says Zarkua, “is that children shouldn’t be treated with second-line drugs; others even deny the possibility of DR-TB in children, because it is so difficult to diagnose and prove.”

MSF doctors hope to find a way to rapidly diagnose DR-TB amongst this age-group, and – until paediatric formulations of TB drugs are available – will treat young patients using adult drugs, as has been done successfully in MSF programmes elsewhere in the world. MSF is also renovating an abandoned chalet in the grounds of the hospital to turn into a sputum induction room, which will be the first of its kind in Central Asia.

Games and creativity

Previously all child TB patients in Tajikistan had to stay in hospital for the duration of their treatment, isolated from their families and with few distractions or amusements. But in Machiton hospital, children will be treated on an outpatient basis where possible, so that they can stay with their families and continue with normal life.

Children in the hospital will be encouraged to take part in ‘development activities’ – playing games, reading, drawing and doing puzzles with dedicated MSF staff. “Our psychosocial team has strategies for every age group, so that the kids receive the stimulation that will help them develop in line with their age,” says Zarkua.

Back to school

When patients are no longer infectious, MSF staff will help persuade their schools to let them continue their education. “We have already had one particularly successful example, when MSF pushed for a smear-negative teenage girl to be accepted back at school,” says Zarkua.

At the hospital, nutritious food is provided, and families of children receiving outpatient care will receive weekly parcels containing high-protein foods – meat, fish or condensed milk – that they might not otherwise be able to afford. Mobile phones and money for transport provided by MSF will help ease families’ communication and travel difficulties.