By Saleh Farouq Gagarawa
Tuberculosis (TB) remains one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases, but for children who contract it, the impact extends far beyond the physical illness. While governments and health stakeholders often measure progress through treatment completion rates, case detection, and policy achievements, experts are calling for greater attention to the hidden social and emotional costs borne by children affected by the disease.
In an advocacy piece titled “The Childhood That Tuberculosis Steals,” Saleh Farouq Gagarawa of LTR Nigeria highlights the often-overlooked realities facing children living with TB, describing the disease as an interruption not only to health but also to education, friendships, play, and childhood dreams.
According to the article, public health discussions on childhood TB are largely centred on clinical outcomes, with little attention paid to the broader consequences of prolonged illness and treatment. Many children miss months of schooling, become socially isolated, and struggle to regain confidence after recovering from the disease.
For families already living in poverty, childhood TB can trigger a wider household crisis. Parents frequently lose income while seeking treatment for their children, transportation and nutritional costs rise, and siblings often take on additional responsibilities. These pressures can deepen existing vulnerabilities and prolong the effects of the disease long after treatment has ended.
The article notes that although Nigeria’s Child Rights Act and international child protection frameworks guarantee every child’s right to health, education, dignity, and protection, many children affected by TB continue to fall through the cracks due to inadequate social support systems.
It raises critical questions about the availability of educational support for children who miss school, psychosocial services to address stigma and emotional trauma, and social protection mechanisms that help families cope with the economic burden of illness.
Gagarawa argues that responsibility for protecting children affected by TB rests not only with parents but also with communities, governments, development partners, and the private sector.
The article points to successful global examples of school reintegration programmes, nutritional support initiatives, psychosocial services, and community-based care models that recognise recovery as more than the completion of medication.
“Recovery is complete only when the child can once again learn, play, dream, and belong,” the article states.
LTR Nigeria is advocating for a more holistic approach to childhood TB—one that prioritises dignity, inclusion, and protection alongside medical treatment.
The piece concludes with a powerful reminder that the true measure of success in the fight against childhood tuberculosis should not be limited to the number of children who complete treatment, but rather whether society ensured that no child lost their childhood because of the disease.