Last year, Master Zhou, who suffered from blood-borne tuberculosis in Xinzhou District, insisted on going home to his family because he thought it was unlucky to be hospitalized for the New Year, despite his serious condition of having a fever of over 39℃ every day. After returning home, he stopped using anti-TB drugs on his own according to the local custom of not taking medicine during the New Year. As a result, before the New Year was over, Master Zhou developed headaches, vomiting, and babbling, but his family continued to ask God to pray for him until the patient fell into a coma before being sent back to the hospital for resuscitation. The doctor diagnosed that the condition of moncler outlet online Zhou was not under strong control, and the tuberculosis bacteria invaded the brain from the lungs, causing fatal tuberculous meningitis. Although it has entered the twenty-first century, there are still few cases of incurable tuberculosis, such as the delay in treatment due to superstition, so that the originally completely curable tuberculosis developed into tuberculous meningitis, multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, and even systemic tuberculosis. According to statistics, these cases can be roughly divided into two cases: some elderly patients still believe that God and Buddha can keep them healthy, especially in remote rural areas; another part of the patients are worried about not being able to afford the cost of TB treatment and turn their hopes for a cure to God and Buddha, which is more common among the poor. In fact, tuberculosis is caused by the infection of the human body by the tuberculosis bacillus, and it cannot be eliminated without relying on drugs and immunity of the body. As long as the first TB patients are under the proper guidance of professional doctors and strictly follow the treatment principles of “early, regular, full, moderate and combined”, 95% of patients can be completely cured. Moreover, the state has provided free checkups and treatment for TB patients, reducing the financial burden of the majority of patients and enabling more TB patients to receive timely and effective treatment. Let’s stay away from superstition and TB disease.