Wed 24 Feb 2010
David Rochkind’s Journey of Discovery – in Ashok Nagar with Hanifa Sayyed
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This morning I was walking around the Ashok Nagar slum with Hanifa Sayyed, a community health worker responsible for several DOTS centers, clinics that help to ensure patients stay on their course of TB treatment. As we were walking around the community I noticed that a few men were stringing up what looked like Christmas lights; thinking that it would make a nice picture I asked if the lights would be turned on in the evening. Hanifa told me that they would and we made a plan for me to return at dusk to take pictures. She gave me her mother’s telephone number and told me to call her when I arrived at the main road, and then wait for her to come and get me. I doubted that this plan would work, but agreed and we continued walking.
We were walking to visit one of Hanifa’s patients, a seriously ill woman who was bed ridden and unable to come to the clinic. I realized that almost all of the very sick patients I was visiting where female and made a mental note to ask if that was a coincidence or if there was some social reason that the majority of bed ridden patients were women. Several people told me a variation of the same answer which seems to make sense, and was backed up by anecdotal evidence and the cultural understanding that comes from spending years living and working in the slums.
I was told that women are usually the last part of a family to seek help for any health problems; they will wait as long as possible before visiting a clinic or seeing a doctor, preferring to meet the needs of their children and husband before tending to their own problems. They will typically wait the longest to enter the health system and, when they do, they will seek the cheapest care possible. Because of all of this, women will often seek care when their sickness is very developed, harder to treat and more debilitating. I was told that this was true not only for women with TB, but for any health problem.
In the evening when I returned, I arrived to the main road and began to walk in to the slum. After about 5 minutes I stopped and called the number Hanifa had given me, but the call did not go through. I continued walking, hoping that something would look familiar and I would be able to find her house, which we had walked by earlier in the day. I quickly realized I did not know where I was or how to get where I was going. But, as I have experienced throughout my time in Mumbai, people were more that friendly, trying their hardest to help me in spite of my inability to speak Hindi. I remembered that Hanifa’s house was near the community public toilet, and asked the owner of a store for the “public toilet” in English. He pointed up the hill and I began to walk. Sure enough, I ran in to Hanifa’s house about 5 minutes later and was invited in for tea, which I drank with her entire family, include 4 generations of the women of her family.
Photojournalist David Rochkind, winner of the 2009 Stop TB Partnership Images to Stop Tuberculosis Award is travelling in India and producing a photo reportage about TB

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