• Says Madiba has lost his sparkle
Graca Machel,
wife of former South African President Nelson Mandela has said that she is
losing hope as the icon battles lung infection. Speaking to a local television
station, Machel said it was painful to see her husband “ageing”. “I mean, this
spirit and this sparkle, you see that somehow it’s fading,” she told ENews
Central Africa. “To see him ageing, it’s something also which pains you …
You understand
and you know it has to happen.” Mandela’s grand-daughter Ndileka told the same
TV network that he had come to accept his condition. “I think he takes it in
his stride, he has come to accept that it’s part of growing old, and it’s part
of humanity as such,” she said. “At some point you will depend on someone else,
he has come to embrace it.”
Military doctors
are treating Mandela for a recurring lung infection, an ailment the 94-year-old
anti-apartheid leader remains susceptible to because of his age and his 27
years in prison. Government officials acknowledged for the first time yesterday
that the illness forced soldiers to admit Mandela to a military hospital at the
weekend, though they said the politician was responding to treatment. Mandela
fought off a similar infection in 2011 and once contracted tuberculosis while
imprisoned.
Medical experts
said respiratory illnesses like pneumonia striking a man his age are a serious
matter that require care and monitoring. “They call pneumonia ‘the old man’s
friend’ because it is the thing that ultimately carries many people off,” said
Dr. Peter Openshaw, the director of the Center for Respiratory Infection at
Imperial College’s National Heart and Lung Institute in London. “What I guess
they’ll be doing is trying to find out exactly which type of infection it is
and then to give it the most appropriate treatment.
With modern
antibiotics and investigation, then there’s no reason a chest infection by
itself should be untreatable.” The announcement ended speculation about what
was troubling the ailing Mandela. His ongoing hospitalization has caused
growing concern in South Africa, a nation of 50 million people that largely
reveres Mandela for being the nation’s first democratically elected president
who sought to bring the country together after centuries of racial division.
The tests Mandela
underwent at 1 Military Hospital near South Africa’s capital, Pretoria,
detected the lung infection, presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj said in a
statement. “Madiba is receiving appropriate treatment and he is responding to
the treatment,” Maharaj said, referring to Mandela by his clan name as many do
in South Africa in a sign of affection. In January 2011, Mandela was admitted
to a Johannesburg hospital for what officials initially described as tests but
what turned out to be an acute respiratory infection.
The chaos that
followed Mandela’s stay at that public hospital, with journalists and the
curious surrounding it and entering wards, saw the South African military take
charge of his care and the government control the information about his health.
In recent days many in the press and public have complained about the lack of
concrete details that the government has released about Mandela’s condition.
Mandela has a
history with lung problems. He fell ill with tuberculosis in 1988 toward the
tail-end of his prison years, after he had been moved from the notorious Robben
Island and to another jail to ease the apartheid government’s efforts to
negotiate with him about a possible release. At first, doctors were uncertain
why Mandela had a persistent cough that ultimately caused him to collapse
during a meeting with his lawyer. After being taken to a Cape Town hospital, a
doctor told him he had water in his lungs. Mandela initially refused to believe
the doctor, he wrote in his autobiography “Long Walk to Freedom.”
“With a hint of
annoyance, (the doctor) said, ‘Mandela, take a look at your chest,’” Mandela
recounted. “He pointed out that one side of my chest was actually larger than
the other.” Surgeons immediately cut into Mandela’s chest and removed two
liters (half a gallon) of liquid from his lungs, which tested positive for
tuberculosis. Doctors at the time suggested Mandela contracted the disease from
his damp prison cell. About 1.4 million people worldwide die each year from
tuberculosis, a bacterial infection which can stay dormant for years.
It also can cause
permanent lung damage, though in his autobiography Mandela says doctors caught
it in time. However, tuberculosis can return to trouble those previously
infected, properly treated or not, and previous damage could have been missed,
Openshaw said. Openshaw, who has not seen Mandela’s medical records and spoke
generally about treating patients, said pneumonia is the most likely
respiratory illness to affect an elderly person, though others can strike as
well.
Doctors typically
use antibiotics to treat such infections, though there needed to be care made
in deciding how much of a dose to give an older patient. And there’s the
challenge of treating a patient that a nation and many around the world remain
anxiously worried about. “It’s particularly difficult if it’s in a special
patient, where you really have to be very careful to try not to overreact, but
just to treat them as if they were any other patient,” Openshaw said. But the
doctor later acknowledged the obvious: “It’s very hard to the balance right
(for) a special, special patient.”
Mandela was a
leader in the struggle against racist white rule in South Africa and once he
emerged from 27 years in prison in 1990, he won worldwide acclaim for urging
reconciliation. He won South Africa’s first truly democratic elections in 1994,
serving one five-year term.
The Nobel
laureate later retired from public life to live in his remote village of Qunu,
in the Eastern Cape, and last made a public appearance when his country hosted
the 2010 World Cup soccer tournament. Mandela disengaged himself from the
country’s politics over the last decade but continued campaigning against AIDS.
He has grown increasing frail in recent years.

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