|
Socios En Salud steps up training and advocacy in the global
fight against MDR-TB
| |
 |
| |
Folder userd for MDR-TB training of Latin American nurses |
With more than a decade on the frontlines against MDR-TB, PIH's partner organization
in Peru, Socios En Salud (SES), has earned global recognition both for innovating
effective, community-based treatment for the disease and for training other
health professionals how to do it. In recent months they have redoubled their
training activities, sending teams to Haiti and Africa and collaborating with
the Peruvian Ministry of Health to offer training for nurses from throughout
Latin America.
In December, as SES was marking its tenth anniversary, a team of two nurses,
a doctor, and a translator traveled to Haiti at the request of their colleagues
at Zanmi Lasante (ZL). Over the course of four days, they trained 25 doctors
and nurses, both from the Ministry of Health and ZL, in delivery of integrated,
community-based care for MD-TB patients. At the end of an intensive round of
lectures, role playing, interactive discussions, field visits and videos, almost
100 percent of the participants said they now felt equipped to manage treatment
of an MDR-TB patient.
The overwhelming success of the training inspired the PIH Lesotho team to
invite SES to train local doctors, nurses and community health workers in treating
the disease. PIH Lesotho has encountered extremely high rates of TB in HIV
patients, and has asked for SES’s guidance in handling the outbreak.
The Peruvian team plans to visit Lesotho for three weeks this spring.
Dr. Jaime Bayona, SES’s founding director has also been on the road
recently. In late March, he returned from Zambia, where the Ministry of Health
had asked him to share his expertise in directing large scale community-based
MDR-TB treatment projects. He helped them prepare an application for funding
to expand their MDR-TB program from the Green Light Committee, which is responsible
for determining whether projects comply with guidelines to receive the second-line
drugs needed to treat MDR-TB.
While they are traveling to train health professionals abroad, the SES team
continues to offer trainings in Lima to Ministry of Health staff as well as
other Latin American doctors and nurses. With financial support from the Global
Fund, they hosted a group of nurses from several Latin American countries in
March. The nurses have been trained in MDR-TB management, and will now be able
to share that knowledge with colleagues in their home countries.
SES
is also still at the forefront of MDR-TB advocacy efforts. In Lima, they are
making World TB Day the climax of a month-long campaign to mobilize awareness
and involvement in the fight against TB. Activities include an exhibit of 41
photos of current and former patients and of SES's work entitled “Danos
una mano, hagamos que la TB sea sólo fotografías” (Give
us a hand, let’s
make TB exist only in photos). The exhibition, presented in the district of
Miraflores, and will help raise awareness, as well as local funds for SES’s
work.
In addition, SES is participating in multiple World TB day events on March
23 and 24. Organizations working with TB and MDR-TB from across Peru will gather
in Lima to call attention to the progress that has been made in fighting the
disease, as well as the need to continue our efforts to improve diagnosis and
treatment. SES will distribute educational materials about their work as well
as information about how to become more involved in the struggle against TB.
Two professional mimes will help SES attract a
[published March 2007]
|
|