~ by: David L K See ~

I refer to the article "Rise in cases of drug-resistant Tuberculosis" (TODAY, Mar 24). Once thought eradicated, Tuberculosis (TB) has made a comeback worldwide, including Singapore. Our densely-populated, tiny island with its hot humid climate is particularly vulnerable to the spread of infectious air-borne respiratory diseases like TB, SARS, H1N1 and Bird Flu.

 
Why should Singaporeans take such respiratory diseases seriously?  A normal person can survive without water or food for days, even weeks.   But if he cannot breathe in oxygen needed by his brain due to infected lungs, he will just die. Such air-borne diseases can be easily contracted in crowded places such as schools, universities, army camps, offices, buses and trains.
 
Although TB affects mostly the lungs, it can spread to other organs, such as the brain (TB meningitis), heart, kidney, bones and even the womb of a female victim, leading to the inability to bear her own children.
 
There are now three forms of TB to deal with — normal TB; Multi-Drug Resistant TB (MDR-TB) and Extensively Drug-Resistant TB (XDR-TB). Treatment of the two drug-resistant forms is difficult and costly, with severe side effects.
 
In 2009, our local news headlines were "Tuberculosis rate in S'pore up for first time in 10 years", "Worrying trend: More younger TB patients and infected foreigners", "More TB patients fail to complete treatment". The 2011 headlines were "New tuberculosis cases on the rise in Singapore", "Cases of infections among non-residents on the rise".
 
The writing is on the wall and this is just the tip of the iceberg. The following are some of our reported TB cases:
  • Foreign Domestic Workers (risk to young children under their care)
  • 21-year old National Serviceman (risk to fellow soldiers)
  • 30-year old teacher (risk to students and fellow teachers)
  • 40-year old Managing Director (risk to office colleagues)
Last November, at a Press Conference, our Health Ministry's Communicable Diseases Director, Dr Jeffery Cutter, tried to downplay public concerns by insisting that most TB patients were elderly people. He also criticised a newspaper report for painting "a very misleading picture that a lot of our TB problems are from foreigners, which is not correct."
 
Ironically, Dr Cutter had previously contributed a March 2011 paper "Tuberculosis among Foreign-born Persons, Singapore, 2000-2009" to the US Center for Disease Control with these excerpts:
"…Singapore liberalized its immigration policy and underwent rapid economic growth during 2005 – 2010. This policy resulted in a marked increase in its population from 4.17 million in 2004 to 5.08 million in 2010.
 
The proportion of foreign-born persons with tuberculosis in Singapore increased from 25.5% in 2004 to 37.6% in 2009. Of these persons with TB, more than 75% came from five of the seven countries (India, China, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Philippines) with highest incidences of TB.
 
Transmission from foreign-born to native-born persons may have occurred, especially in increasingly crowded urban settings of Singapore. Our study highlights the need for measures to address TB among foreign-born persons in Singapore…"
 
Just this January, in Parliament, when queried by NCMP Mrs Lina Chiam, MOH Minister of State Dr Amy Khor disclosed, for the first time, that during the last five years, about 100 students each year were diagnosed with TB – giving a total of some 500 students.
 
Just last week, in a CNA interview, Tuberculosis Control Unit Director Dr Wang Yee Tang raised the concern that our younger population may be at risk of getting MDR-TB. In 2011, Singapore had 6 new cases of MDR-TB, comprising three foreign-born and three Singapore-born residents (19-year-old boy; 27-year-old girl; 30-year-old man).
 
It is shocking to learn that only 50% of active TB patients in Singapore are currently on Directly Observed Treatment (DOT) to ensure they complete the full course of treatment and limit their risk to the wider community. Unsurprisingly, there were 158 cases of relapse last year.
 
Many worrying questions remain unanswered. What are our Health Ministry's pro-active and preventive measures to tackle the growing TB public health threat? Will our Infectious Diseases Act be updated to give MOH legal clout to require all active TB patients here to undergo DOT? Is the Tuberculosis Control Unit given sufficient resources (i.e. funds, manpower, equipment) in our fight against TB?
 
Singapore can never win the fight against new diseases like Bird Flu and re-emerging diseases like Tuberculosis with a laid-back hush-up approach using the convenient excuse of "not wanting to cause public alarm".
 
Our concerned public now expect MOH Director of Medical Services, Dr Satku Kandiah, to furnish an authoritative reply backed by full facts and figures.

The writer is a 64-year old tertiary-educated Singapore Citizen who has completed full-time National Service.

 

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

Driver skips stop but is unapologetic

Kimmy Tan encounters rude and inconsiderate bus driver.

【乌节豪杰大厦命案】将沾有血迹衣服丢弃 27岁被告被监五个月

乌节豪杰大厦(Orchard  Tower)命案被告之一卢文聪,涉嫌把凶手陈显扬带有血迹的T恤丢弃,有妨碍司法公正之嫌,被判五个月监禁。 27岁卢文聪原是乌节豪杰大厦命案的七名被控谋杀的被告之一,然而其谋杀指控被减控,改为在公共场所持有攻击性武器,以及同持有攻击性武器的人。 此外,他因妨碍司法公正,以及一项与赌博有关的罪行,被罚款1千元。而他也于去年12月14日,就妨碍司法公正控状认罪。 2019年7月2日,死者沙迪斯疑似与人在夜店起冲突,被人一刀割喉后负伤倒地,送院抢救无效。警方于12小时内将七人逮捕归案。 根据案情显示,当时卢文聪并没有加入乌节豪杰大厦命案,他和其他人在案发后匆匆离开乌节大厦,在离开案发现场时,他在上车前看见沙迪斯脸上有血,走了好几步路后才倒下。 而卢文聪则立即和其余三人搭上德士离开,随行者包括陈显扬。 随后,卢文聪和陈显扬来到了文礼巴刹,而当时陈显扬身上还持有凶器,而陈显扬则要求卢文聪让他到卢文聪家中洗浴,再搭乘另辆德士离开来到了卢文聪家中。 在陈显扬洗澡后,向卢文聪讨了一件新衣,而卢文聪当时发现陈显扬衣服上有血迹,立即为他递上一条干净的衣服换上。 离开卢文聪家前,陈显扬向卢文聪借了50元和一双拖鞋搭车,卢文聪也答应。在陈显扬离开后,卢文聪开始检查家中是否留有凶器,但却发现沾有血迹的白色T恤遗留在房内。 卢文聪得知这是相当重要的证据,于是将衣服丢弃在走廊外的公用垃圾桶。同天,卢文聪被警方逮捕,最终警方也没能找回沾有血迹的衣服。 目前仅被告陈显扬被控谋杀罪,其余六名被告已陆续被减控,包括陈洪成、陈家兴、卢文聪,改为在公共场所持有攻击性武器,以及同持有攻击性武器的人;陈云胜、洪大源与萧玉珍则被指共谋蓄意伤人,部分已被判刑。…

Sinkholes – Sign of progress?

By Andrew Loh On Thursday morning, local news reported a lorry falling…

DPM Heng: S$9 billion assistance to go to households and businesses in April

According to Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat on Sunday (12 April),…