US charity helps DPRK fight TB
![]() John Rogers, executive director of the Eugene Bell Foundation (right) distributes medication to patients in Ryokpo, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. Photo By Eugene Bell Foundation Via AP |
Despite poor relations between the governments of the United States and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, a US charity is ramping up efforts against an epidemic of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in the DPRK, where it says it is making inroads in fighting the deadly disease.
The Eugene Bell Foundation travels to the DPRK twice a year, bringing high-end equipment and drugs to treat TB patients. The foundation returns this month on a whirlwind, three-week mission to help hundreds of patients.
Pyongyang currently faces stiff US criticism for detaining three US citizens. But the foundation, located in Washington, says it has a good working relationship with Pyongyang and its doctors. It started out providing food aid in the 1990s, but has since mostly helped the nation's health system.
"It's a collaboration, and it works. Our goals are aligned," said John Rogers, executive director of the foundation, which was set up by the son of a Southern Presbyterian missionary family with long experience in Korea.
TB is a contagious, bacterial disease that usually attacks the lungs. The World Health Organization estimates that there were about 100,000 new cases of TB in 2012 among DPRK's 25 million people.
Since 2010, a $48 million program supported by the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria has increased availability in the DPRK of regular treatments for TB. But multidrug-resistant strains, which are more difficult and costly to treat, are widespread, said Dr Seung Kwon-june, Eugene Bell's medical director.
There's been no nationwide survey of the problem, but based on experience at a dozen of these facilities in the southern half of the DPRK, Seung predicts such strains could be up to three times more common than the WHO has estimated.