Thursday, 16 June 2011

TUBERCULOSIS: SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

  • Tuberculosis: Symptoms - MayoClinic.com Tuberculosis usually attacks your lungs. Signs and symptoms of TB of the lungs include: Coughing that lasts three or more weeks; Coughing up blood ...www.mayoclinic.com/.../tuberculosis/.../DSECTION=symptoms - Cached - Similar

  • Tuberculosis SymptomsTuberculosis has been declared an emergency in Africa
    http://www.amref.org/

    TB is a Global Threat TB is one of history’s deadliest diseases. Inform yourself.
    www.tballiance.org

    TB Is Treatable TB is not a death sentence. Treatment is affordable. Read more.
    http://www.one.org/

    LOOK AFTER YOUR KIDNEYS

    We must never forget that all plants and living creatures on the planet are comprised of water and salts. The balance between the two must remain constant. We have all had an experience with the water/salt balance with the plants in our garden. If we put too much salts on a plant in the form of fertilizer, the plant will dehydrate and die.

    When we are sick, we have to take special care of our water-salt balance. When recently in hospital, the doctors advised that my kidneys were going dry. That could be fatal. So I was given an almost permanent drip of water and salts. The doctors monitored the output of urine.

    If at home, we have to take care of our water intake. If sick, we may not want to drink water. That could be fatal. Perhaps we drink fruit juice. In recent nights I have been horrified to find that my urine output has dropped and I felt pain in my kidneys. That is a sure danger sign. I forced myself to drink several cups of water. I do that daily.

    People lost at sea suffer dehydration. They face the danger of damage to kidneys and death. Other silly people do not drink water but only beer, tea and coffee.

    Wednesday, 15 June 2011

    TUBERCULOSIS: NOT AS TOUGH AS WE THINK

    Dear friends,

    I have been asking many questions of the doctors on tuberculosis. There seems to be a paranoid fear about TB in this country, particularly on the TB that may be spat on the road. The TB bacillus is not as tough as we think. It will die out in the open. It will not drill through the feet from a betel nut spit on the road. It will not form a spore and float in the dust.

    For those sufferers with TB outside the lungs, it is difficult to infect another person. But it can still happen through contact with sputum, infected drinks and food. More details later. Tuberculosis is now part of the AIDS Holistics message.

    I have just been for a review to be told that tuberculosis medicine can damage the liver. I have to watch for pain in the liver and whites of eyes going yellow. I stop treatment immediately.

    Saturday, 11 June 2011

    CRUELTY OF TUBERCULOSIS

    After two weeks in Port Moresby General Hospital, the diagnosis has come that I have been infected with tuberculosis.

    This has not been unexpected as I was the carer of my son dying of AIDS and TB. Fatherly love made me push some precautions away to a small boy who died in 2002. Perhaps my infection was more recent.

    There are two types of tuberculosis. One is in the lungs and causes the sufferer to drown in fluid. The olther is outside the lung and is called extra-pulmonary and does not involve the sufferer coughing germs all over everyone else.

    The extra-pulmonary tuberculosis can be transmitted by sputum of a sufferer. It can also pass in infected drink. Instead of passing into the lungs, the bacillus can pass between the outside lining of the lungs.

    I recall my son's X-ray in 2002 that showed his lungs to be white the result of fluid that stopped him from breathing.

    I have suffered the same in recent weeks to the point that I feared being suffocated at 2.00am in the morning. Breathing is a basic necessity.

    My family is no stranger to tuberculosis. I do not tell this story with shame but with certain pride in the fighting spirit of my ancestors.

    The story of tuberculosis is the story of empire. Consumption as it was known has been endemic through Europe for hundreds of years.

    The family historian tells that great-uncle George was stricken with tuberculosis in 1890 and moved to the drier climate of South Africa where he died at the age of 19.

    Sufferers from England tracked to some dry country in the British Empire where the fluid in their lungs would dry. It was certain that the people in those areas were also infected.

    My grandfather John Bell Copeland enlisted in World War 1 and was infected with tuberculosis in 1915. Little is written that there was a tuberculosis epidemic in the war that devastated both sides.

    World War I and Tuberculosis. A Statistical Summary and Review
    by GJ Drolet - 1945 - Cited by 1 - Related articles
    World War I and Tuberculosis. A Statistical Summary and Review*.
    Godias J. Drolet. Presented at a Joint Session of the Health Officers, Vital
    Statistics ...www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov › ... › v.35(7); Jul 1945 - Similar

    18 Jun 2009 ... Throughout World War I, tuberculosis was the
    leading cause of ... At the close of World War I, the tuberculosis mortality
    rate in the ...history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwii/.../CH14.Tuberculosis.
    htm - Cached

    How Did Tuberculosis Affect The Soldiers In World War 1?
    How Did Tuberculosis Affect The Soldiers In World War 1? ... What Were
    Conditions Like For The Soldiers During World War 1? Conditions in the trenches
    were ...www.blurtit.com/q2288786.html - Cached - Similar

    The Guns of August - Digital History
    America at War: World War I ... While fierce resistance by 200000 Belgian
    soldiers did not stop the German advance, it did give Britain and France time to
    The soldiers were ravaged by tuberculosis and plagued with lice and rats.
    www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/database/article_display.cfm?... - Cached -

    He came home to his wife and several children and gave them the infection too. The children were separated from their parents and placed in a sanitarium in Southern Queensland for two years. My father was 4 years old.

    John Bell died in 1925 leaving a widow with a large group of children. With her last money she put them all on a train to Quilpie in dry outback Queensland.

    But the passengers objected to a family of coughing people in the carriage and they were promptly placed in the guard van for the last 1000 kilometers.

    But the guard also signaled ahead and the family found an angry welcoming committee demanding that they return the way they came. They had no money.

    They were allowed to stay on the river bank and banned from coming to town. A kind person gave them a tent and utensils and there they stayed for 5 years. The young children studied by correspondence.

    My uncle and father were sent out to work as drovers. Quilpie was the rail head for the cattle stations. My father became a drover at the age of 11 years.

    Their pay went to their mother. My father never slept in a house until he came back from the war. He was a big man and learned to fight.

    The TB specialist at Port Moresby General Hospital advises that TB medicine became available in 1940. So all family members would have been treated and cured by then.

    My father was very strict but would not explain why. He would never drink beer in a hotel as he believed there was tuberculosis in every half-washed glass. He would not let his children swim in public pools.

    I have learned much in the past fortnight. On two occasions, I was choking at 2.00am and driven back to the hospital seeking oxygen.

    But that was not necessary. Sleeping with head facing a fan had the effect of forcing wind down into the lungs and helping the sufferer to catch breath every moment.

    A sufferer will benefit from a ride in a vehicle with head out the window. A friend may help by fanning the mouth.

    Advice is that the symptoms will subside after two weeks to be followed by pill-popping 5 times a day every day for six months. A sufferer should be allowed to stay in hospital near oxygen or a fan until symptoms subside.

    Many sufferers may seem to backslide because their wantoks do not have the commitment to take them for replacement medicine.

    Descendants of the children above quickly made up for lost time. In my father’s family supported by his wife, all children had high school education and several had tertiary qualifications.

    They are represented in the legal, education and medical fields, supported by the spouses of the members concerned. They are a long way from the river bank in Quilpie.

    As founder of AIDS Holistics, I find that my recent sickness has given me depth of insight into tuberculosis. It is not a disease of lower class. It could be contracted from a person coughing in a bus or a student coughing in a class.

    People with HIV/AIDS are very susceptible to infection. Tuberculosis adds massively to their misery.

    Wednesday, 8 June 2011

    DEATH FROM A FLOATING BOTTLE

    Sorry folks, still too sick to maintain the blog. It may take another few
    weeks. My first report will be on the fool Manus boys who drank from
    a bottle floating in the sea. Two died and one went partially blind. They
    were drinking Methanol. Some boys carry recklessness too far.

    There will be a report from media on the Catholic Conference taking
    a stand on legalizing prostitution. This is a spurious move from United
    Nations.

    The argument is sex workers will far be more willing to go for medical
    check-ups. What of the doctor-patient confidentiality? Do they suggest
    sex workers are in danger of being reported to the police by doctors.
    Good try boys and girls.

    Sunday, 5 June 2011

    UNITED NATIONS BURNS BRIDGES

    There was a large meeting of clergy in Port Moresby in the last week in which the UNAIDS speaker decided to lay down the spiritual law to the blackfellas. He only opened his mouth to change feet.

    He told the clergy that there were two basic problems in the HIV/AIDS response. First there was the negative attitude of churches to condoms. Then there was the church attitude to sexual relations outside of marriage.

    He explained that marriages will stay together if husbands and wives are able to go off and have sex with others. The uproar was immediate and furious. This was based on the gay and lesbian ethic that if you want it, it is OK.

    There are two developments here. The United Nations is now seeking to sabotage the family unit in preparation for a gay and lesbian infrastructure being set up on the crushed church infrastructure.

    So the United Nations is showing its spots. The speaker was followed up on the dais by the Minister for Community Development who is forgetting her ministerial responsibilities to become the spokesperson for the United Nations.

    One day, the world will be in a gay and lesbian mess. If PNG churches remain resolute, these will become the mouse that roared as we saw in the 1950s movie of the same name.

    Could we imagine our UN fool attending a conference in Saudi Arabia and telling the Moslems that they have to allow promiscuous sex in society?

    The world gays and lesbians know that Christian nations are soft targets. They think that in the end, it will come down to funding. So the misionaries came to this shore over 100 years ago.

    They brought the message of love of God. Now the next batch is coming to tell the clergy it is all wrong. These people are working to sabotage faith. They are telling the PNG clergy that it is all man-made.

    Saturday, 4 June 2011

    FEAR OF HEART ATTACK

    This blog spot has had to wait for two weeks while I spent my time in the Intensive Care Unit of the Port Moresby Hospital with a suspected heart attack. It was the nightmare of a lifetime.

    I was given full time attention by an army of doctors and nurses who were totally helpful and determined to get at the bottom of the illness that attacked me.

    As a person involved with explaining HIV/AIDS, I was amazed through the haze of illness and fear, to note the similarity with HIV infection in the impact on the physical body. This mysterious illness like HIV/AIDS had destroyed the water-salt balance.

    My treatment was simple. It meant that my chest was constantly under careful watch by X-ray, electro-cardiograph sounding, blood pressure, temperature. My chart was a kilometer long within a week.

    I was put on a drip of water. One packet empty and the next packet was installed above me. I was on water drip for the whole time there. Blood was taken and this was horrible and painful when the nurse could not find the artery.

    I was strung up by tubes and wires to the extent that I could not leave the bed. Toilet facilities were available at a call to a nurse.

    There was massive pain in my chest starting with the left lung and spread to my heart. The doctors were investigating a number of possibilities. I was told that heart attacks are deceptive.

    Looking back now, I can see that the treatment was basically to restore the water-salt balance, stop infection in heart and lungs , restore the left lung to its proper size with water to the kidneys and oxygen to the tissues.

    My main shame was that I had been promoting Positive Living for a decade for people living with HIV/AIDS.

    I had drunk mainly clean water, eaten fresh, ripe fruit and vegetables, walked up to 15 km a day, did not smoke or drink, worked daily and did my best to be a Papua New Guinea role model. Here I was having a heart attack.

    Many friends visited my bed, more than ever I would dream of. They all told me that I have been living at too fierce a pace. I was told that the Positive Living seeds have struck root. I need only to spend time with God and at peace. Sounds a great idea.

    But on the last day, the final results came in. I did not have a heart attack after all. It was an infected left lung that spread out to infect the heart. Was it caused by a lack of hygiene? I did have an infected tooth. Mouth hygiene is a key matter for us all. Or was it just an opportunistic infection?

    I pay tribute to the professionalism and kindness of the doctors and nurses. They had to put up with a lot. I am not used to being dependent on people for all my basic functions. I could at times be a pain in the you-know-where. It was more in the chest this time.

    My nutrition was looked by hospital and family. The special contribution of the hospital throughout is the provision of brown rice not white rice. Brown rice contains thiamine that strengthens the brain.

    I was reminded of the book given by a friend with the title of Your Body is not Sick but Thirsty. The doctors did not completely accept that as witnessed by the regime of antibiotics given to me.

    But apart from that, the treatment was basically to give my body an extended drink of water. Dehydration is the hand-maiden of dementia.

    I suffered dementia on days 2-3. The ceiling had turned like the wall of pharoah’s tomb with strange messages I could not read. There was a crocodile as part of the ceiling reaching forward. People with dementia report danger to themselves. Such dementia may last only as long as the physiological stress remains.