Probable tuberculosis

 

 

Published: Sunday, Mar 24, 2013,
By Maitri Porecha | Place: Mumbai | Agency: DNA

 

 

After nearly twenty-five years of selfless service at Asia’s largest tuberculosis hospital situated in the heart of Mumbai, Barkhu Pandurang Kharat (53) was perhaps destined to die of tuberculosis (TB). Kharat’s death in January this year raised the number of employees to have died after contracting tuberculosis, at BMC-run Sewri TB Hospital to 42.

“In 2008, my husband started working in the mortuary at the hospital, transporting infected dead bodies from wards to morgue and back. The hospital alone sees close to 150 deaths every month. In 2008, he was first diagnosed with TB. He was hospitalised multiple times as he transgressed to multi drug resistant TB (MDR-TB) and later extensively drug resistant TB. His condition worsened by the start of this year and he succumbed on January 30,” said his widow Sunita Kharat.

Kharat is not the only one. Since 2005, more than 70 workers in Sewri TB Hospital have contracted the infection, 42 among them died. Official figures obtained from the hospital state that two employees in their twenties contracted TB within six months of joining service.

Even though the hospital is quoting conservative estimates, unofficial figures of infected employees roll much higher, say sources. BMC has made tall promises to manage TB on a war footing in its 2013-14 strategy on the World Tuberculosis Day but the civic body would do well to introspect on the appalling conditions prevailing in its own backyard. “Of 12 MDR-TB cases amongst the hospital employees, most of them are relapse cases. In case of these patients, tuberculosis has gripped them as many as three times over the past ten to twelve years. After a brief period of treatment, they resume work in the same wards which makes them all the more vulnerable to contracting TB repeatedly,” said a senior labour union member, Sewri TB Hospital.

What’s worse is that even as a large number of employees including doctors and nurses contract tuberculosis rapidly in the hospital, they are not taken care of in the hospital. A disheartening case in point is the treatment meted out by BMC officials to 38-year-old Balaji Amjuri, a permanent employee of the hospital and a TB patient for the past 12 years.

Amjuri is an extensively drug resistant (XDR-TB) patient. Such patients are advised complete rest but Amjuri is compelled to do his daily duties including sweeping, disposing garbage, washing infection-laden clothes from the ward, all because he has exhausted his three-years’ worth of sick leave. “The head clerk instructed me that I will not be entitled to any more leave.

Inspite of being an XDR-TB patient I am compelled to work. I have spent more than Rs3 lakhs for my treatment. I have to continue working to support my family,” said Amjuri. “BMC rules for availing leave are the same for all employees. However, we may sanction special leave inAmjuri’s case,” said Dr Rajendra Nanavare, medical superintendent at the hospital.

A measly diet and a defunct operation theatre to perform TB surgeries only add to the woes of the employees and patients at the hospital. In 2012, BMC had assured that the high protein breakfast to be provided to its 1,000-odd employees including doctors and nurses will be adequate and palatable. Workers complain that the diet has fallen short on both these grounds.

“The diet chart clearly mentioned that two eggs and 150ml milk is to be provided. We don’t get more than 50ml of milk and one boiled egg. This is grossly inadequate,” said an employee requesting anonymity.

Doctors have not performed a single surgery since the past two months for the lack of surgical equipments. “The anaesthesia machine is not in place for performing surgeries. The OT is temporarily shut,” added the medical officer.

Doctors say that the high rate of deaths in the hospital occur as early diagnosis of tuberculosis is not possible. “Samples for culture tests or Line Probe Assay (LPA) which confirm if the patient has MDR-TB are still outsourced to JJ or Hinduja Hospital. Basic infrastructure is not in place. It takes up to a month for results to arrive,” said a seniormedical officer at Sewri TB Hospital.

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