Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by janrinok on Thursday February 09, @09:30PM   Printer-friendly

Recent X-rays of her lungs were so bad, doctors thought she had cancer:

A woman in Washington state is facing electronic home monitoring and possible jail time after spending the past year willfully violating multiple court orders to have her active, contagious case of tuberculosis treated and to stay in isolation while doing so.

Last week, the Tacoma-Pierce County Health Department announced that it was "monitoring" a case of active tuberculosis in a county woman who had refused treatment.

"Most people we contact are happy to get the treatment they need," Nigel Turner, division director of Communicable Disease Control, said in a press announcement last week. "Occasionally people refuse treatment and isolation. When that happens, we take steps to help keep the community safe."

But reporting by The News Tribune discovered that the woman's refusal to heed public health guidance is a long-standing challenge for local officials. Documents filed in the Pierce County Superior Court and reviewed by the Tribune found that the woman's first court order for involuntary isolation dates back more than a year ago, to January 19, 2022.

Tuberculosis is a bacterial infection caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which mostly causes disease in the lungs, though it can invade other areas of the body. It can easily turn deadly without proper treatment. M. tuberculosis is transmitted through the air when an infected person coughs, sneezes, spits, or launches bacterial cells around them. Although transmission mostly occurs from close, prolonged contact, inhaling only a few of these microscopic germs is enough to spark an infection. According to the World Health Organization, tuberculosis is one of the top infectious disease killers in the world, causing 1.6 million deaths in 2021.

Treatment for tuberculosis is not easy—in uncomplicated cases, it takes a four-month or six-month course of four types of antibiotics to effectively rid the infection. But M. tuberculosis is becoming increasingly drug-resistant, even extensively drug-resistant (XDR-TB), both of which are considered a global public health crisis and health security threat. These drug-resistant cases can take up to 20 months of antibiotic courses to shake using alternative treatments that can be expensive and toxic. But drug resistance develops or increases if patients fail to complete or properly take their prescribed antibiotic courses—as is the case for the Washington woman.

As the January 2022 court documents noted, "The Local Health Officer ordered [the woman] to self-isolate and treat; which she declined to do. [The woman] has not complied with such efforts, has discontinued treatment and is unwilling to resume treatment or voluntarily self-isolate." As such, the health department was seeking an order "requiring [the woman] to isolate in her residence [and] cooperate with testing and treatment as recommended by medical providers."

The court issued an order for involuntary isolation, but it did little good. The woman continued to refuse treatment and isolation, according to an order issued on January 26, 2022. The order was renewed on February 14, 2022—and then again on February 24, and again on March 24, April 19, May 17, June 28, July 27, August 25, September 27, October 21, November 18, and December 16.

[...] The court renewed its order on January 20, 2023, adding that failure to comply this time "may result in a finding of contempt whereby the court orders further measures, up to and including electronic home monitoring and detention in Pierce County Jail or other lawful orders the court may issue, in accord with the applicable code."

In a statement to the Tribune, the health department's Turner said: "We assess that balance between restricting somebody's liberty and protecting the health of the community. We also want to make sure that we have time for the person to comply and try lots of different options that are short of requiring somebody to be detained," he added. "Incarceration detention is the very, very last option that we want to take and we don't do that lightly. But occasionally that becomes necessary if there is a risk to the public."


Original Submission

 
This discussion was created by janrinok (52) for logged-in users only, but now has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by Username on Friday February 10, @03:01AM (2 children)

    by Username (4557) on Friday February 10, @03:01AM (#1291033)

    It's pretty obvious this woman is in the care of the state, otherwise they would have never found out. So she probably is a homeless crazy. Which would make sense considering the type of people who get TB or anthrax infections are those who live in filth.

    The whole thing dancing around why she doesn't take antibiotics. Which would be the interesting part.

    Now, I can see the case where someone wouldn't want to take an untested experimental gene therapy, considering all we know now, yeah that was a bad idea, but tried and proven antibiotics? Why would you have a problem with that? Unless she thinks they're lying to her, and trying to poison her to get her.. secrets...

    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2  
  • (Score: 2, Informative) by khallow on Friday February 10, @04:13AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Friday February 10, @04:13AM (#1291043) Journal

    Why would you have a problem with that?

    There's a number of religions/cults that eschew any form of modern medical treatment, including antibiotics.

  • (Score: 2) by krishnoid on Friday February 10, @05:41AM

    by krishnoid (1156) on Friday February 10, @05:41AM (#1291048)

    Which makes you wonder, how do you "isolate" when you're homeless?