Category Archives: Commentary

MEMORIAM: Dr. Likezo Mubila

Dr. Likezo Mubila

The global health community lost one of its strongest champions last week with the sudden death of Dr. Likezo Mubila. A specialist in neglected tropical diseases for the WHO Africa region, Dr. Mubila was a tireless advocate and partner for organizations and governments seeking to control and eliminate lymphatic filariasis, soil-transmitted helminthiasis and schistosomiasis. Equally at ease in the field as she was among global health policymakers, Dr. Mubila provided a crucial voice on the challenges and opportunities inherent with ridding the world of some of its most pervasive diseases. While we mourn her loss, we also celebrate Dr. Mubila’s legacy and honor the positive impact that her life’s work had on millions of people. For more information on Dr. Mubila, please read the WHO’s official statement on her passing.

The Mysterious Disease

By: Charles Ebikeme

Imagine for a moment you don’t live where you live. Let’s say you live in Benin, or Togo, or Côte D’Ivoire, or perhaps Ghana (we can even add Australia to the list). Perhaps one day you notice on your ankle a small, somewhat pointed elevation of the skin. A nodule. What you have is so painless you consider it inconsequential -it will clear up in a few days. You awake one morning with a slight fever. For this particular ailment it would be rare to have a fever, but not unheard of. Where you normally reside “man flu” is the worst-case scenario you can think of. In Contonou, Benin, you can name at least three diseases that start with fever-like symptoms and could end with your death. Your niece died from one of them – before her fifth birthday, and the other caused blindness in your uncle. But this isn’t any of those.  After a few days this nodule is now the size of a boil. In Washington DC, a boil can be excised. In Togo this is worse than a mere boil. Your foot has swollen – so much that it’s hard to stand upright. Even more disconcerting is that this all comes without any pain. What follows can only be described as horrific; a painless necrotizing skin lesion, followed by ulcer and scar formation. Before you know it, your foot is being eaten away from the inside. The lesion grows and grows, oozing fluid and puss. A wide painless ulcer now covers a large area of your lower limb.  With this disease early diagnosis makes all the difference – but it is often rare.  Surgical excision of the infected tissue has long been the first port of call. Today, along with surgery, you are given the antibiotics streptomycin and rifampin for 8 full weeks. That is if it was caught at an early stage. Your doctor did not know what it is until it was too late, as there are four other diseases that cause skin lesions and ulcers.

With treatment lesions heal but with permanent scarring and contractures which limit movement in your limb. You have no outer skin on the right side of your foot.  A skin graft, taking skin from another part of your body, to patch up the infected area is needed. Imagine a small child of less than 15 years of age needing a skin graft. The lesions are sometimes so large that finding enough healthy skin to graft on is impossible. Eventually it will invade your bones, leading to severe disabilities and deformities. Maybe they will have to amputate. Any pain you experience will be due to secondary infections. Secondary infections that might also kill you.  What you have is the second most common bacterial infection we know of – Mycobacterium ulcerans. The bacteria, produces a toxin – mycolactone. Continue reading

All chronic diseases are not the same.

By: Alanna Shaikh

One of the big narratives of global health over the last decade has been the changing role played by non-communicable disease. Diseases like cancer, heart disease, and diabetes, were once seen as the exclusive burden of healthy countries. Poor countries, on the other hand, faced infectious diseases like tuberculosis and polio. Now, though, that picture is changing, and in some unexpected ways. A new article in eHospitalist News provides a good overview.

First of all, the old school diseases of the wealthy world are increasingly prevalent in poor countries. Asthma, obesity, and diabetes are all shaping up to be serious problems in city dwellers throughout the developing world. And they are often caused by the same lifestyle factors that drive these conditions in the wealthier world – tobacco use, physical inactivity, unhealthy diets, and the harmful use of alcohol.

However, lifestyle isn’t the only factor in con-communicable diseases. Obesity and malnutrition actually often go together. Concurrent infections, lack of access to health-care and environmental toxins also make chronic diseases worse. Subsequently, poor countries are ending up with not just the diseases of the wealthy but a bonus helping of chronic conditions caused by the problems specific to poverty. One prime example: lung disease in the wealthy world is primarily the result of cigarette smoking.  In poor countries, it’s more likely to be caused by chronic pollution, especially indoor air pollution from biomass fuels, and then made worse by smoking. Those kinds of problems are ugly, and hard to solve.

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