History -
Tales from Today's PHAs
Denise's Story - from
Lauren Lambert
1994 -One of my favorite
assignments in the field was as a TB PHA working in Brooklyn, New
York City. I searched the streets of Bedford Stuyvesant for
"lost" and delinquent tuberculosis patients. I became
close with a very special patient, Denise, 16-years old, who was
infectious when I located her. How about seeing human blood getting
hosed out of an elevator at a housing project in Brooklyn? She
sometimes lived with her 2-year old son and grandmother. I started
court-ordered Directly Observed Therapy (DOT) with her in the field,
which was often difficult due to her heroin addiction. (Denise said
she wasn't an addict, explaining to me that she would NEVER shoot
it, just snort it). I bribed her with bags of my old clothes -she
could choose one item each day she was compliant with DOT (meaning
she was where she said she would be.) This, in addition to many
McDonalds meals and rides, proved to be a successful way to ensure
completion of her TB treatment, and with much encouragement, she
also enrolled in a Methadone Maintenance Treatment Program.
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