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(For World Tuberculosis Day on 24 March, The Quint is posting a series of articles to raise awareness about the disease, including actions to address stigma, discrimination, marginalisation and overcome barriers to access care.)
When Saher, a 26-year-old business professional, was diagnosed with TB, she was neither frightened nor worried.
“We are a family of resilient people. We are used to taking a problem by the horns and resolving it,” she says in a matter-of-fact way. Yet, the battle against TB was filled with challenges she had not anticipated.
Saher was abroad on a business trip when she began coughing.
She came back to India and went to an ENT Specialist, who diagnosed her with hyper-acidity.
“Apparently, I didn’t eat enough so I was coughing endlessly. I was given a lot of antacids and other medicines,” she recalls.
But the medicines only had marginal impact. Several weeks into treatment and she saw no significant change in her situation.
The coughing became quite extreme and it became difficult to talk sometimes.
In desperation, she decided to change her ENT and was referred to one of the leading ENT doctors in the city.
“We were so confused. No one could tell me what I had. He asked us to get tests done including an X-Ray, and we got them done,” she recalls.
Saher and her mother went to see the doctor with her reports. The doctor took one look at the X-Ray and walked to his cabin door and told them that he couldn't help them.
“We could not believe it and reasoned with him to help us.”
The doctor immediately started speaking to Saher and her mother in Hindi, somewhat condescendingly as if they were uneducated and therefore deserving of contempt.
Despite pleading with him, he didn’t help further. At their insistence, he asked his assistant to give them the number of a doctor based in Delhi who could help them.
Saher had never felt more helpless.
Saher went to the doctor immediately and he asked her to get a sputum test. Additionally, he asked her to repeat all her tests.
Based on her test results, the doctor put her on treatment for drug-sensitive TB. However, what Saher found frustrating was that the doctor treated her rather poorly.
While her family assured her that everything would be fine, no solace was forthcoming from her doctor.
Saher, with the help of her brother, took to googling and learning about TB.
In desperation, she went to see her paediatrician who had treated her illnesses from childhood.
Fighting TB suddenly became easier because Saher trusted her doctor. He was also associated with the DOTS program. “He explained everything about TB to me. I felt more confident of defeating TB,” she recalls.
Taking treatment was one thing but as time passed Saher realised TB would also have an impact on her professional life. Working in a job with extensive travel meant she could not talk openly about her disease.
She was also the only female member of a high-powered team where she chose to keep silent about her sickness.
There was also the constant fear of infecting others.
One of her friends was immuno-compromised and had spent a lot of time with Saher. Her concern was that she too might be infected.
As time passed, she came to know more friends and family who had survived TB.
After completing the treatment, Saher slowly brought life back to normal. Yet, fears remain of a reinfection.
“I was usually the strong one in the family but TB changed that. Every minor cough is scary,” she says. Saher continues to work as hard as she did before but TB has made her more health conscious.
(Chapal Mehra is an independent writer, public health specialist and an advocate on issues of health, development and human rights. He has been working with survivors and experts to provide greater visibility to health issues particularly TB and HIV.)
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Published: 23 Mar 2017,05:40 PM IST