Skip to content
SierraLeone_20230818_LakkaGovernmentHospitalTB_CKleiboer_145-1

Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis: Improving the Standard of Care in Sierra Leone

The country’s first MDR-TB treatment program is at a PIH-supported hospital

March 31, 2022: Saio is cured.

Saio Kamara proudly holds a yellow, pocket-sized paper and with a smile tells those around her: “This is my TB certificate.”  

It’s more than just a piece of paper. It marks a major milestone: being cured of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). The document includes details, such as her diagnosis, treatment type, and, most importantly, her completion date: March 31, 2022. It’s a day she’ll never forget.  

248015_SierraLeone_1017_LakkaMDRTB_JLascher_06
SierraLeone_20230818_LakkaGovernmentHospitalTB_CKleiboer_199

Left: A TB treatment completion certificate photographed at Lakka Government Hospital in 2019. Right: Saio Kamara poses for a portrait outside of the hospital in August of 2023, 18 months after she completed treatment and was declared cured (John Lascher and Caitlin Kleiboer / PIH).

It’s when, after more than two years of intensive inpatient and outpatient care, the now 29-year-old widow was reunited with her son and two daughters. Many patients with TB around the world don’t get to experience that moment—or proper care, at all. But the situation is far different at Lakka Government Hospital in Sierra Leone, where the cure rate for MDR-TB is around 75%. Globally, the average is less than 60%. 

“If I ever tell anyone I was a TB patient, they don’t believe me, because look at me now. I’m happy and strong,” says Kamara, who couldn’t stand by herself when she was admitted.  

Meet Dr. Girum Tefera

For many years, Dr. Girum B. Tefera has treated patients with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis—from his home country of Ethiopia to now Sierra Leone. Since 2019, he has led MDR-TB care at PIH-supported Lakka Government Hospital.

The global effort to stop TB, the deadliest infectious disease in the world, needs more resources. Please, contribute today.

High-quality, patient-centered care

TB is the deadliest infectious disease in the world despite it being treatable. The incidence of TB also reveals glaring health care inequalities, as more than 95% of deaths occur in developing countries, including ones where Partners In Health (PIH) works. And Sierra Leone has one of the highest burdens of the disease, which is why PIH is committed to improving care for patients there. 

Since 2017, when PIH began supporting and renovating the facility, Lakka Government Hospital has led the way in MDR-TB care. It has had many firsts: the first MDR-TB treatment center in the country and, most recently, the first country in the world whose Ministry of Health accepts a shorter, six-month MDR-TB regimen for nationwide use.

The longer regimen, which Kamara completed, included more than 15 tablets per day for two years. Now, the regimen offered is between five to seven pills per day for six months. 

280691_sierraleone_1120_lakka_mbrownstein_054
280709_sierraleone_1120_lakka_mbrownstein_063

Packets of medication and supplements (left) and a well-stocked pharmacy at Lakka Government Hospital. Modern medication is necessary for MDR-TB treatment, but not sufficient on its own. It must be combined with proper nutrition and social support. (Maya Brownstein / PIH).

While medication is a key part of care, support at Lakka Government Hospital extends beyond pills.  

When a patient is admitted to the hospital, one of the first people they meet is a social worker, such as Sarah Kamara, who speaks with them to better understand their needs. 

“Most [patients] when they come in are destitute. Their family members or maybe neighbors just come and dump them. They just leave them here. So, 9 out of 10 [patients] need extra, extra social support,” says Kamara, who shares the same name with Saio Kamara, but is not related.  “Some have no clothes, bed sheets, toothpaste, gloves, or soap. Most of those things, PIH provides for them.” 

Sarah Kamara and a psychosocial counselor go room-to-room every day to check on patients at the 140-bed hospital, of which only about 50 are currently functional following infrastructure renovations. They provide encouragement, basic counseling, and dispel misinformation. 

PIH teams all over the globe are getting the cure to people with TB and helping them survive months of treatment. You can help!
SierraLeone_20230818_LakkaGovernmentHospitalTB_CKleiboer_001
SierraLeone_20230818_LakkaGovernmentHospitalTB_CKleiboer_035

Dr. Girum Tefera checks up on Sorie Kamara, a father of three from Bo, Sierra Leone, five days into his course of treatment for MDR-TB at PIH-supported Lakka Government Hospital. He came to Lakka unable speak easily, or walk at all (Caitlin Kleiboer / PIH).

Saio Kamara heard those stories, too, about the previously run-down hospital. Community members told her she wouldn’t survive if she went there. 

“But when I came, the nurses, the doctors, and PIH took care of me,” she says. “[They] talked to me, advised me, and made me take my medicine.” 

Even after being cured and discharged with a TB certificate, her uncle and loved ones were skeptical. So much so that they kicked her out of the house because of her cough. She immediately returned to the hospital to seek support. Yet again, PIH stepped in to help by providing a free, short-term apartment.   

That type of care isn’t a one-off situation. At Lakka Government Hospital, staff will do whatever it takes to make patients well. Sometimes social support includes money for school fees or food to bring home; it’s a personalized package. 

“Thank you for the life you’ve given to me because I was already dead.”

-Husband and father, Sorie Kamara, after five days of treatment.

Addressing Challenges

But there are challenges too.  

Patients with MDR-TB stay at Lakka Government Hospital for a month, at minimum, and often much longer. While staff try to keep patients engaged and mentally healthy, many struggle with depression and other mental health conditions. And there aren’t yet any daily recreational activities, TV, or other forms of entertainment to keep patients occupied. Knowing all this, staff are focused on stabilizing patients and helping them reach a point in their care when they are no longer contagious, allowing them to re-enter their communities and visit the hospital as outpatients through the rest of their treatment regimen. 

Perhaps the most pressing challenge is the lack of an ambulance. There’s one, but it’s only allowed to transport patients to another facility for tests not available at the hospital such as X-rays, CT scans, or ultrasounds. An ambulance—dedicated to transfers—is needed to bring patients who need specialized care to other facilities.  

SierraLeone_20230818_LakkaGovernmentHospitalTB_CKleiboer_165

The single ambulance at Lakka Government Hospital, which became the first MDR-TB referral facility in Sierra Leone in 2017. (Caitlin Kleiboer / PIH)

Advancing the model of care

Despite these challenges, care is improving. There are now three MDR-TB treatment centers in the country, including one at PIH-supported Koidu Government Hospital in Kono District and another in Makeni, which is supported by Médecins Sans Frontières. The goal is to create additional MDR-TB facilities to expand and decentralize access to care for the country’s 8 million residents. For that to become a reality, more specialized staff—among other things—are needed.

PIH staff currently work with the Ministry of Health staff at the facility level by providing on-the-job training and intensive workshops on MDR-TB care. Additionally, at the national level, the team provides technical assistance to partners in Sierra Leone’s National TB Program by helping to develop protocols for care and update guidelines.   

In partnership with the government, PIH is paving the way for more people like Saio Kamara to recover. Since 2017, more than 900 patients with MDR-TB have received free services at Lakka Government Hospital.  

“When you come here,” says Sarah Kamara, “we want to see you leave here healthy.”  

 

You can make a difference.

Join the movement to make health care accessible for everyone.
Take the first step today.

Make a donation

Your gift has the power to save lives. Every little bit counts.