When “The Program is Good, But the Disease is Better”: Lessons from Peru on Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis

Author: Smith-Nonini, Sandy

Source: Medical Anthropology, Volume 24, Number 3, Number 3/July-September 2005 , pp. 265-296(32)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

This is a qualitative study of the politics of public health surrounding a resurgent tuberculosis epidemic in Lima, Peru during the 1990s. The paper traces the role of debt and neoliberal economics in creating conditions for the epidemic, and the reforms that turned Peru's TB program into a model for treating drug-susceptible disease by 1996. Despite this success, public health officials were blind-sided by the appearance of drug-resistant TB in the late 1990s when their “good” program turned out to be not good enough. The study follows the conflict, and eventual collaboration, that ensued between the Ministry of Health and a local NGO affiliated with Boston-based Partners in Health, which undertook a radical program of community-based directly-observed therapy (DOTS-Plus) to treat drug-resistant patients who otherwise would have died. Lessons from this case are relevant to many international settings where “hot-spots” of drug-resistant TB currently exist and go untreated, posing a threat to the success of national TB control programs.

Keywords: infectious disease; drug-resistant tuberculosis; international health

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01459740500189548

Affiliations: 1: Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Elon University, Durham, North Carolina, 27705, USA

Publication date: 2005-07-01

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