I just wanted to share a really awesome story that was shared with me yesterday. Im sure it won't give you all the "warm fuzzies" that it gave me but I am going to share it with you anyway....
I was at a meeting yesterday with the sub district office for SA Department of Health (they have partnered with CMMB for the TB project that just started a few months ago) and the clinic programs manager, Mrs. Nelani, shared a great story with us. She was at a funeral (this is not the "great" part of the story)this past weekend in Ndevana, and area where CMMB provides testing services, for a man that had died from TB (also not the "great" part I am referring to). At the funeral they spoke about how sad this death was because it could have been prevented. Then as more people got up to speak they kept talking about how TB is a disease that needs to be taken seriously and pleading with people in the congregation who are on TB treatment to stick to their regimens. They also talked about the importance of people being tested for TB and that, as a community, they can prevent this disease etc etc.
After the funeral Mrs. Nelani was so impressed with the information that these speakers were sharing with the congregation. She asked one of the speakers how he and everyone else knew so much about TB. The man told her that he and his community had learned about TB from "some Catholics" that have been coming door-to-door offering HIV and TB testing. As soon as he said that, Mrs. Nelani knew the "Catholics" he was referring to was actually CMMB.
From my own perspective, I think it is really encouraging to see that the education we are providing to clients is really helping people to understand more about TB as a disease. Of course the testing services we provide are important, but in all honesty, the health education that accompanies testing is the sustainable piece of this program that is going to last when project is over, hopefully helping to prevent new cases of TB in the future. And after all, that's why we do what we do.
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