jj’s Reviews > Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection > Status Update
jj
is 74% done
"The light that had once shone brightly in my eyes was now dimmed,” he wrote. “As the months went on, the isolation grew more profound.” (Ch16, p6)
— Dec 09, 2025 04:15PM
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jj’s Previous Updates
jj
is 92% done
"And this is why I would submit that TB in the twenty-first century is not really caused by a bacteria that we know how to kill. TB in the twenty-first century is really caused by those social determinants of health, which at their core are about human-built systems for extracting and allocating resources. The real cause of contemporary tuberculosis is, for lack of a better term, us." (Ch23, p6)
— Dec 09, 2025 11:29PM
jj
is 89% done
"It reminded me that when we know about suffering, when we are proximal to it, we are capable of extraordinary generosity. We can do and be so much for each other—but only when we see one another in our full humanity, not as statistics or problems, but as people who deserve to be alive in the world." (Ch22, p17)
— Dec 09, 2025 11:21PM
jj
is 88% done
"“This is a human-manufactured problem that needs a human solution. If medications were a public good, the burden of disease would drive the priorities of the industry and TB treatment would be varied and plentiful.” And so we must fight not just for reform within the system but also for better systems that understand human health not primarily as a market, but primarily as a shared priority for our species."
— Dec 09, 2025 11:18PM
jj
is 84% done
“I know the social impact of a child sleeping in the hospital every night for over a year. I understand this anger, this lack of trust in medicine. I understand. Maybe if it was my child, I would do the same thing.”
— Dec 09, 2025 10:40PM
jj
is 82% done
"A child born in Sierra Leone is over one hundred times as likely to die of tuberculosis than a child born in the United States. This difference, as Dr. Joia Mukherjee writes, is “not caused by genetics, biology, or culture. Health inequities are caused by poverty, racism, lack of medical care, and other social forces.”" (Ch20, p3)
— Dec 09, 2025 10:36PM
jj
is 79% done
"All of this happens because of what Dr. Mitnick describes as “a failure of imagination.” “There is this continued mentality of scarcity in TB,” she explained."
'failure of imagination' - i've come across this concept expounded in different contexts (mostly in development books describing sports breakthroughs or learning to see past your self-imposed limit). But applied to public health & society, truly interesting
— Dec 09, 2025 04:35PM
'failure of imagination' - i've come across this concept expounded in different contexts (mostly in development books describing sports breakthroughs or learning to see past your self-imposed limit). But applied to public health & society, truly interesting
jj
is 78% done
"Covid remains a serious public health threat in 2025, and a major driver of death and disability, but the situation is different from 2020 because of the research money poured into responding to the disease. If TB became a problem in the rich world, attention and resources would rain down upon the illness until it ceased to be a problem for the rich, powerful, and able-bodied." (Ch18, p3)
— Dec 09, 2025 04:29PM
jj
is 78% done
"Dr. Girum later told me, “Yes, I know, it’s just one patient. There are so many patients, and Henry is just one. Why should we move mountains to save one patient? Because he is one person. A person, you understand? And anyway, what if he can be the first of many?”" (Ch17, p8)
*cries because what else can we do for the man beside us but what God commanded to love your neighbour as yourself*
— Dec 09, 2025 04:26PM
*cries because what else can we do for the man beside us but what God commanded to love your neighbour as yourself*
jj
is 75% done
“My friend lost his life. And after he died, something told me: ‘You are next, Henry. You are next.’ ” Henry felt certain that his death was imminent. He found himself crying more, and leaving his room less. When Isatu visited with food, he wouldn’t eat it. He had no appetite—although the doctors couldn’t say whether it was due to depression or tuberculosis. To Henry, they were inseparable.
— Dec 09, 2025 04:16PM
jj
is 71% done
"In fact, Danaher CEO Rainer Blair once noted that GeneXpert provided “a razor-blade business model in a mission-critical application,” as if bragging that the company’s profit is built around price gouging the world’s poorest countries and those who serve them." (Ch15, p8)
'mission-critical' - to crow over profits in the face of saving human lives, heartless and cruel
— Dec 09, 2025 04:05PM
'mission-critical' - to crow over profits in the face of saving human lives, heartless and cruel

