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Source: meanjin.com.au
Annabel Stafford
October 3, 2018
Fashion can be weird, but for a few decades in the middle of the 19th century it went completely nuts. All the cool kids wanted consumptionāa disease that liquidises your lungs and drowns you in blood, or else causes your organs to fail. They painted their faces white, rouged their cheeks and penciled on veins to mimic the hectic flush of a constant low-grade temperature. They tightened their corsets until their chests hollowed out and their shoulders stuck out like a skinny birdās wings. And according to microbiologist-turned-historian Carolyn Day who details the surreal trend in her book Consumptive Chic, even doctors said it made you better looking.
Day says the strange trend was a way of dealing with a death sentence. In the absence of a cure, consumption became something only those with a certain dispositionāmarked by beauty, sensitivity and geniusācould catch. āSo, if you are predisposed to the illness and you go from the hot crowded ballroom to your cold carriage: consumption. If you have a tragic love affair: consumption. If you read the wrong thing: consumption.ā
Among the rich, anyway. Among the poor, it was ātreated as a different diseaseā, a sign of vice and hard living. Then came the death of the famous Parisian courtesan, Marie Duplessis, the inspiration behind La Traviata and La Boheme. Once consumption was linked to prostitution and poverty, Day says, its fashion moment was over. The discovery of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which causes the disease, made it even more unfashionable. And any residual link to beauty or genius was completely broken whenāwith the help of antibiotics and public health measuresāthe disease was eradicated among the rich.
But then a strange thing happened. Tuberculosis, or TB, didnāt retain its association with vice and hard living, though it certainly remained among the poor. It seemed to disappear altogether, to become invisible.
In 2010, Warren Entsch, Federal MP for the Queensland seat of Leichhardt, got a call from a constituent. A Papua New Guinean girl had died at Cairns Base Hospital and her family couldnāt afford to repatriate the body. The 12-year-old had been killed by tuberculosis. As a child, Entsch had visited his mother during the year she spent in hospital with TB. But that was the 1960s, Entsch says, āI honestly thought ⦠that TB had been eradicated.ā Entsch arranged a fundraiser to pay for the girlās repatriation as well as her funeral and burial dress. When not long after, another 12-year-old was brought to Cairns Base Hospital with TB, Entsch offered to foster Violet āto give her a chanceā. But Violetās father wanted payment for her; āI wasnāt going to buy a childā, Entsch says. The girl returned to PNG and a few years ago Entsch lost contact with her. āIām worried sheās dead,ā he says. He heard of other tuberculosis cases, like the mother, daughter and granddaughter who all died within a couple of years of each other on the Torres Strait Island of Saibai.
āI suddenly realised it was a major issue.ā
The severity of the issue was highlighted when the World Health Organisation released its latest Global Tuberculosis Report, which estimates around 1.6 million people died from TB last year. An estimated 1.7 billionāalmost a quarter of the worldās populationāhave latent tuberculosis, which hides out in the body waiting for the right conditions before it attacks. The right conditions are a seriously compromised immune system, similar to what happens when you get HIV; when the AIDS epidemic hit in the 1980s, TB had a field day.
The WHO figures are even more shocking when you consider Mycobacterium tuberculosis is curable. For now. The bacteria have been around almost as long as humanity and seem determined to stick around. The WHO Report estimates 558,000 new cases of tuberculosis diagnosed last year were resistant to at least one of the drugs used to treat it. Most were resistant to multiple drugs. Worse, these resistant strains are spread through coughing just like run-of-the-mill TB. Resistant TB not only takes longer to treat, the tougher drugs needed to defeat it have serious side effects like psychosis and deafness. What doctors call āextensively drug resistantā (XDR) tuberculosis is on the rise and health experts fear itās only a matter of time before thereās a strain resistant to every treatment we have.
The rates of TB in Australia are still very low, but multi-drug resistant (MDR) tuberculosis is a growing threat. In Queensland alone, 96 patients were diagnosed with MDR tuberculosis TB between 2000 and 2014, according to a study published in the International Journal of Tuberculosis and Lung Disease this year. The bulk of these patients were diagnosed in the later years of the study and most were from Papua New Guinea, where MDR-TB is at emergency levels. Over the same time period, Australian doctors were forced to stop treating at least 13 patients because of the risk they wouldnāt adhere to their treatmentādaily injections for six months and around 20 pills a day for up to two yearsāand the TB would become even more resistant. It is not known what happened to these patients, but itās likely they have all since died.
Extensively drug resistant TB is āalmost impossible to treat at the moment, but if it develops further resistance and then becomes transmissible ⦠weāll be back to our pre-antibiotic days,ā says the studyās lead author, respiratory physician Tim Baird. āItās extremely frustrating when you know you can cure something and (yet) itās becoming more and more incurable.ā
It is partly in response to this threat that the United Nations hosted a high level summit on stopping tuberculosis on September 26. Entsch, who is part of a Global TB Caucus, says Australia should be playing a key role in the fight because of the emergency levels of disease right on our doorstep. Even if it werenāt so close, TBās airborne transmission means borders are no protection. āWhile itās a disease of poverty it can be transferred anywhere in the world in 24 hours,ā he says.
Varney Lake, superintendent of the Monrovia Central Prison in Liberia, is pissed off. Our small group of journalists and NGO workers has been body searched and stripped of everything except pens and paper. Now we sit in hastily arranged plastic chairs in a corner of the prison yard, while Lake tells us that officialsāhe doesnāt say where fromāsurveyed tuberculosis in his prison last year, and he still hasnāt seen a report. Since then, there have been a number of new cases and one young man has died. Lakeās health officers have tried testing the manās cellmates but theyāre refusing to produce the sputum needed for a microscope test, which identifies tuberculosis. The dead man himself (who Lake insinuates was falsely imprisoned), denied having TB right up until he started coughing blood. He died a week later. Seeing the prisonās sickbay, where four men sleep in a two-bed cell with plastic tacked over the windows and two bowls of plain rice a day, itās not hard to guess why. Not that the other accommodation is much better. Across a yard of packed earth and listless men, many of whom lost limbs during Liberiaās civil wars, there is a four-storey cellblock. Inmates hang from the barred windows, calling out insults or lowering shopping bags, hoping someone will fill them with water.
āIām meant to have 375 inmates, Iāve got 1102,ā Lake says. āYou do the math.ā He paces in front of us, shin-high black boots covered in dust. He canāt be expected to manage TB as well as an overcrowded prison. The Government canāt even manage. A few months before, two āhard core criminalsā escaped the Liberian Governmentās special Annex for drug-resistant tuberculosis when the handcuffs keeping them chained to their beds were unlocked. Theyāre still at large, he says.
āWeāre all at risk.ā
Case in point: one of his health workers has just tested positive for TB. The man sits across from us, dusty black suit hanging from bony shoulders. He holds a cane with one hand and rests a book on the opposite thigh. Later, I catch a look at the title: Preparation for the End Time.
I was in Liberia with the NGO RESULTS, which is trying to raise awareness about diseases of poverty like tuberculosis. And hereās what I became aware of: a disease of poverty is one you catch if you live in a mud hut in a village with no electricity, or running water, and four out of five hand pumps are broken. Or itās a disease you get if you live somewhere like Monrovia Central Prison, or the nearby West Point slum, epicentre of the Ebola outbreak, where narrow dirt alleys are littered with shit because thereās no running water and only a few toilets for an estimated population of 75,000. Here showers are a LRD$15 bucket of water in a corrugated iron ācubicleā that juts over the Atlantic Ocean and its tideline of garbage, on which one of my travelling companions saw a decapitated corpse. I became aware that theyāre the diseases you get if taking a day off work to go to the doctor means your family will starve.
But I also became aware that ādisease of povertyā means more than an illness caused by living in hard conditions. It means a disease that anyone can get, but only poor people die from. Consider that despite the millions of people with TB, hardly any new treatments have been developed since the 1970s. Itās hard to escape the conclusion that itās because the poor are not a market.
Joia Mukherjee, Chief Medical Officer of the NGO Partners In Health which works in Liberia, says āmarkets will always fail when it comes to diseases of povertyā. Mukherjee, a Marxist and Harvard Medical School professor, points out the irony in the US Orphan Drug Actāmeant to foster drug development for rare diseases with tiny marketsābeing used to encourage the development of new TB treatments. Or a proposal to give TB drug sponsors a patent extension on another drug in their pipeline. Because, she says, āif you extend the patent six months, you can make like a billion dollars on, you know, a male pattern baldness drug.ā
Mukherjee tells me that until the late 1990s, drug resistant tuberculosis was not even treated in Africa; treating it was considered ātoo expensiveā. Under WHO recommendations, patients in poor settings got generic TB treatment or none at all. It was as if drug resistant tuberculosis, ādidnāt existā in Africa, Mukherjee says. Eventually activists like Mukherjee were able to convince the WHO that multi-drug resistant TB could be treated cost-effectively, but not before hundreds had died and the disease had developed even more resistance.
The memory clearly angers Mukherjee. Her son, she tells me, had childhood cancer. āIt just never occurred to me to say, you know, āI appreciate that you can do something for him, but I think itās my responsibility to say (donāt). Itās just too expensive.ā But thatās kind of what we expect from Africans ⦠Aboriginal people, Filipinos, Mexicansā. In other words, from poor people.
In 1978, Susan Sontag argued that before it had been eradicated among the rich, tuberculosis was described āin images that sum(ed) up the negative behaviour of nineteenth century homo economicusā. Early capitalism āassumed the necessityā of discipline and careful spending; tuberculosis was linked to over-exertion and wastage. (Cancer with its ārepression of energy (and) refusal to consume or spendā is the dreaded disease of consumer capitalism). I wonder how Sontag would explain TBās invisibility now. I wonder what constitutes ānegative behaviourā under high capitalism? Maybe if youāre not a consumer, even simple existence is too much to ask?
In his work on the ānew xenophobiaā, Indian author Tabish Khair has argued that those who canāt contribute to the capital economy are expendable; they are, to borrow Michel Foucaultās term, let die. In a 2015 paper, Khair argues that from the 1980s onwards capital was increasingly abstracted from currency, let alone labour, social relations or actual human bodies. Moreover, āthe nature of high capitalism enables power to be exercised in the abstract,ā he writes. This abstract operation of power allows high capitalism to imagine itself as āa revolution against old structures of oppressive powerā. The invisibility of human, suffering bodies allows us to keep thinking of ourselves as the good guys. āIt is when the bodies of the out-group start becoming visible, or start making themselves visible,ā Khair writes, that the ānew xenophobiaā of high capitalism begins to use its abstract avenues of power āto control, erase, consume or exile themā. Khair says the exercise of this abstract power, under which humans become invisible and are left to dieāthrough, say, obliquely worded immigration lawsānonetheless amounts to genocide.
Invisibility of the suffering body is not simply about preservation of our own self-image. In a 2018 essay on the Grenfell Tower fire, the ABCās online religion and ethics editor Scott Stephens drew on philosopher HervĆ© Juvin to argue that in the 21st century, humanity had been cleaved in two. On the one hand was the rich body āthe body beautiful, the fabricated body, the body of our own choosing, with its panoply of carnal obsessions: from cosmetics, cosmetic surgery and perfumes, to hair removal and hairstyling, to body sculpting, body building, body piercing and body art. On the other, there are those bodies that remain caught within the brute logic of nature.ā
The maintenance of our demanding Western bodiesāthe dissatisfaction required for never-ending economic growthādepends on denial of the poor body and its claims upon us. Our demand requires this denialāthrough abstract language, flashing numbers on screens or, as Stephens argues, the deadly cladding which made the Grenfell fire so deadly. This cladding āwas a way of hiding the lived reality of its residents from their fabulously affluent neighbours,ā Stephens writes, āthe point ⦠was to condemn the residents of Grenfell Tower to a state of invisibilityā (his emphasis).
But such immunity to the needs of others, Stephens argues, willāand I paraphraseācome back to bite us on the arse. And so it may be with tuberculosis.
The invisibility that has allowed us to ignore the fate of non-western bodies is the very thing that has allowed the epidemic to grow and the disease to mutate. The diseaseās spread may force us to recognise our own interdependence, to recognise that we are not immune to the lives of others. It may force us to acknowledge that the poor do exist, even when they donāt consume or fit into the capital economy. Either that, or thereās a very real possibility that we will be returned to the days before antibiotics when there were no diseases of poverty, and weird fashion was our only consolation.
Annabel Stafford is a freelance journalist and casual academic. She lives in Sydney.