
The disease Jill Seaman battled is not new. In the 19th century,
kala-azar ravaged much of eastern India, where it earned its
name--Hindi for "black sickness." In 1900 a British physician,
Dr. William Boog Leishman, developed a stain to detect the
parasite with a microscope, and Dr. Charles Donovan demonstrated
that specimens could be extracted from the spleen. In their
honor, the deadly parasite is called Leishmania donovani.
Variants of kala-azar are found in southern Europe and South
America. A complex treatment involving daily injections of a
potentially toxic, antimony-based compound (as in the drug
Pentostam) has been available for a half-century.
Although the epidemic in Sudan involved a known disease, it was
complicated by the fact that for a long time no one knew the
outbreak was occurring. The western Upper Nile is one of the
world's most remote areas. It has almost no roads, and the Nuer
ethnic group that populates it is extremely isolated. To make
matters worse, the Islamic fundamentalist-influenced government
in Khartoum was engaged in a civil war with the people of the
south, where Christianity and traditional African religions
prevail. Displacement caused by the war and famines had further
weakened the population, and the government showed no interest
in stopping a disease that might prove more effective than armed
troops in quelling rebellious groups.
About the time the epidemic was beginning to spread, Khartoum
banned relief flights into the south, and most international
organizations, including the U.N., stayed out. Medecins Sans
Frontieres refused to go along. In the summer of 1988, with a
team already in Khartoum, MSF clandestinely sent a second one
into the south. The team soon began to hear reports of a strange
new "killing disease," which its doctors in Khartoum believed to
be kala-azar.
By then Seaman was attending classes at the London School of
Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Four years earlier, she had taken
a break from her job in Alaska to work with Ethiopian refugees
at a camp in Sudan but came to realize that she needed more
training in tropical medicine. When MSF was scouting at the
school for a doctor to take on kala-azar in Sudan, she signed up
immediately.
Before MSF hired her, there had been a debate within the
organization about whether a kala-azar epidemic of such massive
size could be handled with no hospitals in the area. "We were
going to be dealing with thousands of patients at a time, and we
didn't know if it would be possible to do this out in the open
and under a tree," says Johan Hesselink, who headed
MSF-Holland's southern Sudan operations during that period.
When she finally reached Sudan, even Seaman was not sure what
she had signed on for. "My legs swelled up to twice their size
with mosquito bites," she says, "and I was ready to cut my
one-year contract short by 11 months." But she was clearly
captivated by the place and stunned by the enormity of the human
catastrophe around the town of Duar, the center of the epidemic.
"If you witness a tragedy like that, how can you not be moved?"
she explains. "Where else in the world could 50% of a population
die without anyone knowing?"
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