brotherpeacemaker

It's about our community and our spirituality!

World Tuberculosis Day

tb

About nine months ago I found out I had been exposed to tuberculosis.  As a new employee for one of the hospital complexes in the area, tuberculosis is part of employee orientation.  The company couldn’t have employees putting patient’s health at risk.  And employee health screening is standard procedure.  I had a reaction to an injection of some form of tuberculosis solution just beneath the skin.  A week later there was a small raised bump at the injection site.  It was a positive result.

The last tuberculosis test I had was almost twenty years ago when one of the supervisors at the little information processing company I worked for came down with full blown tuberculosis.  Everyone in the office was tested and we all tested negative.  At least that’s what they told us.  Back then they used the little four pronged poker to irritate the skin.  I tested negative then.  That might not have been the source.

I could’ve been exposed to the strain while living in Texas and traveling throughout the state.  It could’ve happened when I took that jaunt to Nuevo Laredo.  It could’ve happened when I took that trip to London, England or Petit Valley, Trinidad or Red Deer, Canada.  I could’ve gotten it anywhere.  That wasn’t the issue.  The issue was that I had tested positive right then and right there.  I had to go for further testing.  I had to get a chest X-ray.  And that X-ray machine was cold!

I thought about my son and I was scared.  I didn’t want him coming down with it.  I am ashamed to say that I really didn’t think about anyone else but him.  I didn’t even think about myself.  I was scared for him.  The doctor at the employee clinic in the basement of the hospital explained to me that the tuberculosis could be controlled or neutralized to a point where it would never develop to the full blown version of the disease.  If I consented to nine months of taking a couple of drugs I had an excellent chance of keeping the disease at bay.  I took the offer.  And after eight and a half months of popping the pills I have two weeks left to go.

But the tuberculosis scare got to me.  If I had tuberculosis what else did I have?  I consented to a hepatitis treatment and an HIV test.  Waiting for the results of the HIV test was like torture.  What would I do if the results came back positive?  I started hating every woman I ever had sex with.  Both of them!  Just kidding.  But you get my drift.  I started wondering what in the world did I see in them.  The sex wasn’t even close to being worth it.  But the test came back negative and my biggest worry evaporated.  I was so happy that exposure to tuberculosis was the only thing I had to worry about.  Life was good in a twisted kind of way.  Two weeks of pill taking to go and I can go back to a pill free existence.

Now, why does this come up today?  I am so glad you asked.

Yesterday, March 24th, was World Tuberculosis Day.  I didn’t find out until I was at work surfing the Internet on official company business.  At least that’s my story and I plan to stick with it.  Irregardless, I was at work and I wasn’t about to take a chance of modifying my blog on the clock.  That’s a really good way to get canned and now is not the time to take unnecessary risk with one’s employment.  I had to wait until after I got home to do my part.  It’s just that my part will be a day late and hopefully not a dollar short.

World Tuberculosis Day is designed to build awareness that tuberculosis remains an epidemic in much of the world, causing the deaths of over a million and a half people each year.  March 24th commemorates the day when Dr Robert Koch astounded the scientific community by announcing that he had discovered the cause of tuberculosis, the TB bacillus.  In 1882, when Mr. Koch made his announcement in Berlin, Germany, tuberculosis was raging through Europe and the Americas, causing the death of one out of every seven people.  Mr. Koch’s discovery opened the way toward diagnosing and curing tuberculosis.

The Global Plan to Stop TB, 2006-2015, is designed to dramatically reduce the proliferation of tuberculosis by 2015 by ensuring that anyone and everyone infected with tuberculosis, even those with a drug resistant from of the disease, benefit from universal access to diagnosis and treatment.  This strategy supports the development of new and effective tools to prevent, detect, and treat the disease.  And if the actions in the plan are implemented, millions of lives will be saved while everything possible is done to reach those most vulnerable to the disease.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009 - Posted by | Life, Thoughts, Universal Healthcare

6 Comments »

  1. [...] Visit original post at brotherpeacemaker [...]

    Pingback by Hepatitis treatment blog - hepatitis c, health, treatment, drugs, hdv » World Tuberculosis Day « brotherpeacemaker | Tuesday, March 24, 2009 | Reply

  2. Irregardless of what you may hav been told, Irregardless is not a word….regardless means what many people use irregardless for!

    Just a silly note from the English Professor!

    As for the tuberculosis, sorry to hear about that. I really do hope that the treatment works out well, and that you are able to continue a long normal life!

    -Mike

    Comment by Mike Lovell | Wednesday, March 25, 2009 | Reply

    • Mike,

      Ahh, ahh, ahh! Irregardless IS a word! It is more than likely a blend of two words. Yes, it is a double negative word, making it irregular, nonstandard and thus illogical. Yet, the word does exist and can be found in most dictionaries. Most entries were under regardless. The usage of the word was mostly in humor but has now gained in verbal usage and usually not written text.

      Irregardless of the fact the word is illogical it IS now a word. I personally would rather see the word regardless! ;)

      Thanks

      Comment by theblacksentinel | Wednesday, March 25, 2009 | Reply

  3. Black Sentinel-
    IS NOT!!! IS NOT!!! My Webster’s II New Riverside Dictionary shows the word nowhere, either by itself, or under regardless.
    Nevertheless, I will succumb to your usage of common illogical wording, even if it means (by the connotation of double-negativism) completely opposite of the intended message. Please humbly accept my submitification!! ;)

    Comment by Mike Lovell | Wednesday, March 25, 2009 | Reply

    • Thanks for the feedback Mike Lovell,

      But according to Merriam-Webster’s Online Dictionary:

      “Irregardless originated in dialectal American speech in the early 20th century. Its fairly widespread use in speech called it to the attention of usage commentators as early as 1927. The most frequently repeated remark about it is that ‘there is no such word.’ There is such a word, however. It is still used primarily in speech, although it can be found from time to time in edited prose. Its reputation has not risen over the years, and it is still a long way from general acceptance. Use regardless instead.”

      Peace

      Comment by brotherpeacemaker | Wednesday, March 25, 2009 | Reply

  4. TB was a big factor in my father’s life; his father (my grandfather) died of TB around 1925, leaving his wife with their 6 children — the oldest, my dad, was 14 — and no insurance and no income. So it makes perfect sense to me that you would think mostly about your son.

    These days, people aren’t sent to live outdoors as they were back then, but we do have the problem that TB has apparently evolved so that some of the drugs that had been effective before may not be with the newer strains, particularly for people with weaker immune systems.

    Comment by Betsy | Wednesday, March 25, 2009 | Reply


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