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15 Jul 2010
by Working Group

Posted in TB Treatment

The Sanatorium Files: Part 4 – DOTS

Connecting the DOTS: Unprecedented Approach to Ensure Compliance. This is the fourth in our series “The Sanatorium Files.” We round out the series with this post on the most recent development in the treatment of TB: an unusual and unprecedented public health program to ensure compliance with the TB drug regimen called directly observed therapy, short course (DOTS).

8 Jul 2010
by Working Group

Posted in TB Treatment

The Sanatorium Files: Part 3 – The Sanatorium Movement

This is the third installment in our series “The Sanatorium Files.” Without the scientific understanding needed to develop effective therapeutics to fight tuberculosis in its many forms, doctors, patients, families and charlatans looking to make a profit tried a wide range of treatments to offer any hope of relief and a cure. One of the most universal and pervasive approaches for people with the most common pulmonary form of the disease was that of rest and fresh air for patients, leading to the creation and proliferation of sanatoriums, or long-term TB treatment hospitals/resorts in Europe and the U.S.

1 Jul 2010
by Working Group

Posted in TB Treatment

The Sanatorium Files Part 2: The Diagnosis Dilemma

The Diagnosis Dilemma: How Could They Treat It If They Didn’t Know What It Was?
Until the discovery of the antibiotic streptomycin in 1944, sufferers of tuberculosis and their physicians throughout recorded history did not know that the diverse collection of maladies and symptoms they fought were all different manifestations of the same disease1:

pulmonary tuberculosis, also [...]

18 Jun 2010
by Working Group

Posted in TB Prevention and Control Strategies

The Sanatorium Files Part One: Timeline

This post launches a new series on NewTBDrugs.org called “The Sanatorium Files,” which will explore how medical practitioners, caregivers, society and governments have fought the ongoing TB epidemic and the impact these treatments had and have on the patients receiving them. This first post in the series is a timeline showing the evolution of tuberculosis treatments, ranging from the harmless but useless to the painful, bizarre and dangerous, and ultimately leading to the antibiotics used to treat the disease for the last 30-40 years.

17 Jun 2010
by Working Group

Posted in TB News

NY Times Article on Sanatoriums

The last of the nation’s original tuberculosis sanitariums sits, improbably, just off Interstate 95, near a Dunkin’ Donuts and a Motel 6, and just behind fields of children playing soccer. The fading signs out front simply say A.G. Holley State Hospital. There is nothing to suggest that one of history’s greatest killers lurks inside.