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Sputnik launches Community Health Workers to combat MDR-TB in Siberia
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Directly observed therapy in Tomsk |
Partners In Health Russia marked a major milestone in November with the launch
of "Sputnik," a new health promotion program to improve care for
patients living with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in Tomsk, Siberia.
For the first time in Russia, the program is recruiting, training and paying
local people to work as community health workers, who will visit patients in
their homes every day to make sure they are taking their medications. The primary
beneficiaries of the program are the most downtrodden and marginalized members
of the Tomsk community—the elderly, jobless, homeless, and those suffering
from addiction to alcohol and other drugs.
With the launch of the new program, health workers are now providing directly
observed therapy twice a day, along with intensive nutritional and social support
in order to address patients’ urgent needs. Working with Tomsk Oblast
TB services, health workers are empowered to provide financial and logistical
assistance, including helping to clean patients’ homes, obtaining food,
or making recommendations to governmental social services for additional help.
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An MDR-TB patient's home in Tomsk.
Despite oil-fueled economic growth, many rural areas in Russia remain
extremely poor. |
Paid community health workers have long been an essential component of PIH's
model of community-based care in Haiti, Peru, Boston and Rwanda. CHWs have
often proven to be the key to maintaining adherence to treatment among the
most vulnerable and marginalized patients. The decision to incorporate them
into our work in Tomsk was taken after research showed a significant number
of patients were not completing the long and difficult course of treatment
for MDR-TB. Specifically, default from treatment has increased by 12 percent
compared to the previous year among the most recent group of civilian patients
in Tomsk.
PIH is eager to demonstrate the effectiveness of comprehensive social support
coupled with MDR-TB treatment in the Russian setting. Dr. Salmaan Keshavjee,
a PIH TB specialist who visited Tomsk in November to help launch the program,
is optimistic:
“This new program of accompaniment is a critical tool to reach the poorest
and most vulnerable segments of the population. Like accompagnateurs
at other PIH sites, it will provide essential linkages with the health care
system as well as a program of social and economic supports that will create
an enabling environment for economically, socially and medically vulnerable
patients to complete treatment”.
[posted December 2006]
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