In Swaziland, 99 patients from Matsapha clinic and 35 from Mankayane hospital who had successfully completed their treatment for drug-resistant TB received honorary certificates from MSF saying, “I got tested and cured of TB”.
Feature story |

Surviving drug-resistant TB in Swaziland: "I’m still over the moon”

5 min
Photograph by Audrey van der Schoot
In Swaziland, 99 patients from Matsapha clinic and 35 from Mankayane hospital who had successfully completed their treatment for drug-resistant TB received honorary certificates from MSF saying, “I got tested and cured of TB”. Photograph by Audrey van der Schoot

Ninety-nine patients in Swaziland who successfully completed their treatment for drug-resistant tuberculosis have been presented with certificates by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) saying “I got tested and cured of TB”.

In Swaziland, 99 patients from Matsapha clinic and 35 from Mankayane hospital who had successfully completed their treatment for drug-resistant TB received honorary certificates from MSF saying, “I got tested and cured of TB”. .
Photograph by Audrey van der Schoot

Proudly holding her certificate, which reads “I got tested and cured of TB”, is Khanyi. Thirty-five years old and a mother of two, Khanyi lives in Logoba, an overcrowded informal settlement in central Swaziland, most of whose residents came to the industrial town of Matsapha in search of job opportunities. 


"TB is not the end" is a poem by Lungile Nhleko, 38, who is being treated for multidrug-resistant TB. Even though her 11-year-old daughter died from the disease, Lungile has not lost hope. Read the poem below.


Three years ago, while taking care of her diabetic husband, who was also co-infected with HIV and TB, Khanyi was herself diagnosed with TB.

Khanyi’s husband found it very difficult to stick to his treatment. If Khanyi was not there to insist that he took his medication, he would not take it. Anxious and distracted by caring for him, Khanyi often failed to take her drugs too.

Eight months into her treatment for TB, Khanyi was found to have multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB), a strain of the disease that is resistant to the most common anti-TB drugs.

“I strongly believe that I brought MDR-TB upon myself, because I would sometimes miss my TB treatment,” says Khanyi. “When my husband became ill, I became worried with caring for him. I remember the time he was admitted to hospital. I rushed to hospital to be at his bedside, and in the confusion I totally forgot about my treatment. I believe this is when I developed resistance to the drugs.”

Following her diagnosis, Khanyi was enrolled at MSF’s clinic in Matsapha, five km away, which offers patients home-based care. “The good thing about receiving treatment at the MSF clinic is that I got my injections at home,” says Khanyi. “This was a relief because, by then, both my husband and I had stopped working due to sickness, and money was scarce. Getting treatment from home meant I could cut on travelling costs.”

Still, Khanyi describes starting MDR-TB treatment as “devastating”, and will never forget the pain of eight months of injections. “I could not bear the injections,” she says. “The pain would spread to my knees and back – it was so bad I couldn’t even walk. My every movement was thoroughly contemplated before it was made.”

Alongside injections, Khanyi had to take a daily cocktail of pills, with unpleasant side effects which can include constant nausea, depression, deafness and sometimes even psychosis. She admits there were times when she was tempted to stop the treatment altogether. “The tablets were very exhausting,” she says. “Just the thought of taking them was depressing. I had moments when I was tempted to give up treatment. But when I had such thoughts, I would think of my children. Being a widow with both my parents dead, I couldn’t imagine dying and leaving my children orphaned.”

Some months into her treatment for MDR-TB, Khanyi’s husband died, and one of her two daughters was diagnosed with TB. But, in spite of everything, Khanyi was able to overcome the emotional and psychological challenges to complete her treatment. She was helped in this by MSF’s medical teams as well as by the encouragement of members of the community who volunteer to support patients at home.

Today Khanyi lives a normal life with her two daughters. They survive on what Khanyi earns as a fruit vendor. Her only regret is having infected her daughter with TB, although her daughter too is now cured of the disease. So Khanyi’s joy is double, even if she cannot share it with her husband.

“I was ecstatic when the doctor told me that I had been cured of MDR-TB,” says a smiling Khanyi. “I couldn’t believe it was possible and I had made it through. I’m still over the moon.”

©Audrey van der Schoot

Khanyi is not alone in celebrating: 63 other patients from Matsapha clinic and 35 patients from Mankayane hospital, some 45 km away, can proudly show certificates from MSF which proclaim, “I got tested and cured of TB”.


MSF has been working in Swaziland since 2007, running integrated HIV/TB projects in the Shiselweni and  Manzini regions. Alongside the Ministry of Health, MSF has integrated HIV and TB services at clinics and in the community. MSF is also advocating for the introduction of shorter, more tolerable treatment regimens for drug-resistant TB and the promotion and implementation of outpatient care for people with the disease.


This is a poem by Lungile Nhleko, 38, who is being treated for multidrug-resistant TB. Even though her 11-year-old daughter died from the disease, Lungile has not lost hope.

TB is not the end

As I lie in my bed: weak and tired
Succumbed to the continuous sickness
That I don’t even know how to deal with
It has been endless
Chest pains that eliminate the interest in breathing
Night sweats, oh so I wish they could just vanish
Ongoing coughing that pains deep inside me
Look at me now, my clothes don’t fit me anymore
I’ve lost so much weight

What is this?
What is it exactly?
I’ve been taking flu medication, but to no avail
I worry all the time: What will I do?
What are you exactly?

They say it’s TB
The airborne disease
It sounds so scary
But there is hope
Because it’s curable
It’s not the end and all
Not for a sec

As John Donne said;
“DEATH, BE NOT PROUD”
Because TB IS NOT THE END
There is a cure for it
Hope is revived