‘Global work on a local level’: DeKalb gets new tuberculosis clinic

Dr Alawode Oladele in front of a new X-ray machine that is part of DeKalb General Medical s new tuberculosis clinic The county has the highest rate of TB infections among Georgia counties Rebecca Grapevine Healthbeat DeKalb County has the highest rate of tuberculosis cases in Georgia Next week it s opening a new clinic to help test for the infection and treat it The clinic at the county s Richardson Soundness Center on Winn Way is in a renovated space on the ground floor It features eight medication rooms along with a separate entrance and negative pressure instrument to prevent the spread of the contagious bacterial infection A new radiology suite has a digital imaging system for X-rays Last year DeKalb shared cases of TB a rate of per in while neighboring Gwinnett and Fulton released and respectively according to a surveillance review from the state Department of Masses Medical Part of the reason for DeKalb s high rate of TB is the demographic make-up of the county disclosed Dr Alawode Oladele the supervising physician and laboratory director for infectious diseases and refugee medical at DeKalb Society Wellbeing It has to do with the diversity of the county and the fact that a lot of folks who are here who are not U S born come from what we call high TB-burden countries Oladele mentioned referring to nations with high TB rates People who were born abroad make up about of the county s TB cases he reported The bulk came from Mexico India Guatemala or Vietnam according to the state DPH s surveillance analysis Refugees and immigrants are typically screened for TB before they enter the United States Oladele explained most of of DeKalb s cases are in undocumented refugees or immigrants who have been here for awhile from high-burden countries The other of DeKalb s cases come from people born in the United States Oladele noted affecting people from all walks of life tuberculosis workers laid off in DeKalb Oladele has spent the past years working on TB in DeKalb He was born in Nigeria and came to Atlanta to investigation medicine at Morehouse School of Medicine and Emory University I would watch people die from TB in Nigeria and it s sad because we have the quota to prevent those deaths right But we didn t have access Oladele revealed He sees his work in DeKalb as an opportunity to do global work on a local level noting that the World Robustness Organization last year deemed TB the top infectious cause of death in the world with about million deaths in Oladele explained treating TB and stopping its spread is very stock intensive In chosen cases staff members must supervise patients taking their drugs daily typically for four to six months Contact tracing can be complicated especially among undocumented communities and those who lack trust in the leadership and healthcare workers DeKalb County funded the new clinic but latest cuts to constituents wellness funding have introduced new constraints Oladele announced of the more than people who worked on TB contact tracing and ensuring people took their medications in DeKalb were of late let go by the state after the federal cabinet clawed back Covid relief funding to state healthcare departments Without the funding without the tools we re handcuffed and it limits our ability to do the work Oladele revealed Global funding for tuberculosis prevention and restoration decreased in and remains far below target according to the WHO The U S Agency for International Expansion the country s main foreign aid agency until this year led global TB eradication efforts But the Trump administration has dissolved USAID President Donald Trump s proposed budget for next year would if approved decrease help for global TB work from this year s million to million It s been amply demonstrated that investments by the U S regime in strengthening global TB prevention and control have direct benefit to our country declared Carmen Marsit a professor at Emory University s School of Residents Medical It is really crucial that just as diseases know no borders our efforts don t stop at our dividing line While tuberculosis numbers were on the way down prior to Covid cases have since ticked back up globally nationally and in DeKalb Oladele revealed The Centers for Illness Control and Prevention disclosed that national tuberculosis rates increased three years in a row from to What is tuberculosis TB is an infectious bacterial ailment that primarily affects the lungs but can infect other parts of the body The bacteria can stay in a person s body for years or even decades without making them sick or being transmissible to other people in what is called latent TB But if a person s immune system can no longer control the infection latent TB can develop into operational TB which can lead to sickness or even death especially if left untreated TB germs can spread through the air when a person with advancing TB coughs speaks or sings In comparison to highly transmissible diseases like measles TB typically requires prolonged close contact to spread In the United States those at higher jeopardy of disorder exposure include people who live in certain congregate settings like homeless shelters or prisons as well as people traveling from countries where TB is common according to the CDC People at exposure of progressing the malady if infected include those with immune systems that are weakened due to medications or conditions like cancer or HIV AIDS In its primary stage TB manifests with flu-like clues like a low fever tiredness and cough Current TB complaint can upshot in coughing up blood or mucus chest pain fever and chills among other indicators The malady is treated through the use of antibiotics and a case is typically required to take daily medications over multiple months Globally rising numbers of drug-resistant TB complicate the work of controlling this complaint Drug-resistant TB doesn t respond to common medications and requires more complex recovery The WHO describes multidrug-resistant TB as a citizens fitness problem noting that worldwide only about in people with drug-resistant TB accessed the healing in Healthbeat is a nonprofit newsroom covering community vitality published by Civic News Company and KFF Strength News Sign up for their newsletters here The post Global work on a local level DeKalb gets new tuberculosis clinic appeared first on Rough Draft Atlanta