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TB News from India: May
June 2004 Issue Health and Development
Initiative-India, (www.healthinitiative.org), publishes ‘TB News from
India' once every two months. The objective of newsletter is to highlight
issues related to Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS control in India and enlist
political, public, professional and administrative support for its cause.
Health and Development Initiative-India is a not-for-profit organization
and the news items have been quoted from various sources for fair use and
in public interest. Reproduction of the material published is welcome
provided a reference is made to the original source of the news item and
TB News from India.
Editorial note:
Network for Action on TB and Poverty
“Friends, to win the battle against TB, we also have to win the battle
against poverty. There is a close link between poverty and disease, and
this is true about TB also. Malnutrition, congested living conditions, and
unhealthy working environments predispose the poor to this killer disease.
We have to remove these disease-breeding conditions by improving the
quality of life of the poor and weaker sections in our society.” – Atal
Bihari Vajpayee, Prime Minister of India
The relationship between TB and poverty has been explored in depth as a
result the 2002 World TB Day theme “Stop TB-Fight poverty”. We have been
able to identify the constraints and obstacles that poor people face while
trying to access treatment for TB. These barriers must be eliminated if
the TB control programmes have to succeed. However, this would require
concerted and coordinated efforts by TB and poverty experts with different
backgrounds.
The decision of the Coordinating Board of the Stop TB Partnership to set
up a Network for Action on TB and Poverty is a step in the right
direction. It is hoped that this network will become a platform for
innovative implementation and sharing of experiences. It is encouraging to
note that the Coordinating Board has decided to set up the Secretariat for
the Network in a developing country. This will help the Network, which is
going in for a phased expansion of its activities, to seek greater
participation of policy makers, NGOs, women and the poor.
The Network bodes well for a country like India, which is burdened with
one third of global TB load and has 26% of its population living below the
poverty line. India needs support and help from all quarters in its battle
both with TB and poverty.
Prime Minister reaffirms his pledge to fight TB to the finish
A committed political leadership supports TB control initiatives in
India. The presence of Prime Minister and Union Health Minister at the
inaugural function of Second Stop TB Partners’ Forum sent out a clear
signal that Government of India is determined to fight TB to the finish.
Mr. Atal Bihari Vajpayee assured the delegates assembled at the Second
Stop TB Partners’ Forum in New Delhi on World TB day 2004, the Prime
Minister of India declared, “I am also a partner with you in this war on
TB – both as a person and, of course, as India’s Prime Minister.”
He said that there was no room for complacency in India’s renewed fight
against TB and low case detection rates and non-adherence to treatment,
which plagued TB control programme in the past, were simply
unacceptable.
He advised TB control programme managers to take the programme beyond
government ministries and launch an aggressive awareness drive to
generate demand for DOTS in the community.
Full text of Prime Minister’s speech is available at:
http://pmindia.nic.in/lspeech.asp?id=541
Indian Business Alliance to Stop TB
The World Economic Forum’s Global Health Initiative has brought
together seven top Indian businesses and the public sector to work
together to stop tuberculosis in India. Specifically, this alliance of
companies will implement the Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP)
for their workers and families in collaboration with the Indian
Government.
The Alliance launched on WTBD comprises the Global Health Initiative,
RNTCP, the Confederation of Indian Industry, WHO and the Global
Partnership to Stop TB. The companies involved are Aditya Birla, Larsen
Toubro, Lupin Ltd, Modicare Foundation, Novartis India, Reliance
Industries, Tata Steel and Triveni Sugar. These companies together cover
a population of 3.5 million and have publicly committed to control TB in
India.
The aim of the "Indian Business Alliance to Stop TB" is to tackle
tuberculosis in an area where it can cause the most harm -- closed
workplaces, and also eliminate the attached stigma and lack of awareness
about TB.
Related story: India's Public, Private Sectors Unite Against TB
Click here for the story
In Haryana, shoemaker leads war against TB
(By Toufiq Rashid, Express News Service, dated 29th
March 2004)
It’s an unlikely battleground in India’s fight against TB; a disease
that Prime Minister Vajpayee recently said poses a serious threat to the
country’s progress and well-being. Bansi Lal is an unlikely warrior.
But try telling him that. A shoemaker who lost his father to the disease
and saw his brother struggle against it has turned a small room in his
run-down double-storey house in Karnal’s (a city in north Indian state
of Haryana) Sadar Bazaar area into a TB clinic for nearly 110 patients.
After having joined as a community volunteer in the tuberculosis control
programme of the Government a year ago, he has put 50 patients on the
path to recovery.
Lal decided to join the war against TB, for which he takes no
remuneration, after his younger brother contracted and survived the
disease. ‘‘My father died of it and my brother also got it. When it
happens in the family, you realize how fatal it is,’’ he says.
Everyday TB patients from nearby houses line up outside Lal’s house to
take their daily dose of medicine. If the queue gets too long, his
teenage daughter Madhu and his younger brother Mohan Lal pitch in.
Lal is one of the hundreds of volunteers registered as DOTS provider
under RNTCP in India. The programme advocates taking help from the
community to implement DOTS, wherein a patient is administered medicines
under the supervision of a trained person—a doctor or a paramedic.
Explaining the importance of volunteers like Lal, TB in-charge of the
district Dr N. Saini says: ‘‘To have each and every TB patient monitored
by a doctor is not possible in India as the patient load is very high
and the number of doctors very less. So these community volunteers are a
great help.’’
Read the full story at:
http://www.indianexpress.com/full_story.php?content_id=43966
India Tuberculosis Control Report Card bares RNTCP’s Achilles' heel
India TB control Report Card issued by an international organization,
Massive-Effort on WTBD this year has placed Andhra Pradesh, Assam,
Bihar, Haryana, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Punjab and
Uttar Pradesh in the ‘Failing’ category. These states, which constitute
56% of the Indian population, are curing 30% or less infectious TB cases
using Directly Observed Treatment Short course (DOTS). The report card
says, “ little or no progress was made in the past year to extend the
DOTS treatment services to more people in these states. People living in
these states should demand to know why so little progress is being
made”.
DOTS services have either just begun or are absent in another 16 states
or centrally administered territories, which are home to 5% of
population of the country.
The report card places Gujarat, Kerala, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and West
Bengal in ‘could pass soon’ category for curing 30% to 60% infectious
cases using DOTS. Only four states have won distinction for curing 60%
or more infectious cases.
Nearly 2 million people became sick with TB last year in India. More
than 400,000 died. Say the authors of report card, “ The marks on this
report card are not academic. Rather, they are truly a matter of life
and death”.
Read the full story at:
www.massiveeffort.org
Unlikely heroes in a strained health systems
(HDN Key Correspondents visit a DOTS clinic in center of New Delhi,
following Stop TB Partners Forum in March 2004).
Stopping tuberculosis is a daunting task and it takes more than just the
DOTS strategy to succeed. It also takes the hidden heroes - the men and
women who work in TB centres every day, oftentimes underpaid, overworked
and unrecognized.
The moment we entered the New Delhi-based DOTS clinic, it was
immediately clear that the center is run by a well-trained staff that
care deeply about the men, women and children that are treated for TB
there. The clinic is spotless and despite limited resources, is well
organized and well cared for. It is also very busy. A display board
shows the number of clients visiting the center each month, and the
catchments area served by the center - 2 million residents in the
densely populated city of Delhi.
Behind the well-trained staff and the well-kept clinic, is the doctor in
charge, who has been working in TB control for over 30 years. Initially,
he was reluctant to speak to our group of five who had just identified
ourselves as participants of the Stop TB Partners Forum. He was unaware
there was a Stop TB Forum happening. In fact, he was unaware that there
was a Stop TB campaign at all. But he was aware that 30% of all TB cases
are found in India and he was aware of the programmatic deficits and
resource shortages that are preventing the clinic from operating at an
optimum level. His frustration was palpable. He lamented that he has
been working in TB control in the capital city of Delhi for three
decades yet no one bothered to inform him or the hundreds of health
workers who are working with DOTS in TB clinics.
Read the complete story at:
http://eforums.healthdev.org/read/?forum=stop-tb
Source: STOP-TB eForum 2004:
stop-tb@eforums.healthdev.org
Quacks treating TB patients in slums of Ludhiana
(Shivani Bhakoo, The Tribune, Chandigarh. March 24,2004)
Notwithstanding claims by the Health Department of providing free medicine to
tuberculosis patients in the Ludhiana district through their directly
observed treatment (DOT), thousands of TB patients living in slum areas near
the Buddah Nullah (in industrial town of Ludhiana) are being treated by
quacks.
The slum areas adjoining the Buddah Nullah, including Shivpuri, Madhopuri,
Guru Nanak Pura, Kundanpuri, Sundernagar, Salem Tabri, Chandernagar, and
Bihari Colony are a hub of patients suffering from tuberculosis. But rarely
has any health worker for detection or treatment of tuberculosis approached
them.
Ram Sirat, a labourer of the migrant Bihari colony, said there were around
500 jhuggis (shanties) in the area. Almost every second person in the colony
was suffering from chronic cough, he said.
“I have been living in the colony for the past three years but no health
worker has approached us for the detection or treatment of disease. I have
been taking medicine for TB from a private practitioner”, he said.
According to sources, even big industrial houses have appointed quacks as
their “medical officers”. An industrial worker, on condition of anonymity,
said because of lack of awareness and education, the migrant population could
easily be fooled by their employers.
Read the complete story at:
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2004/20040324/ldh3.htm
India Launches Free Drug Program but ARV Supplies Inadequate
(San Francisco Chronicle - April 2, 2004)
Down a dark corridor on the ground floor of New Delhi’s Lok Nayak public
hospital, Room 32 beckons with a glow of bright lights, fresh paint and
the promise of free antiviral drugs for a handful of India's poorest
AIDS patients.
Here and at six similar sites in this nation of 1 billion citizens, in
April this year, the Indian government took its first tentative steps
toward distributing AIDS drugs to 100,000 people.
At the new Lok Nayak AIDS clinic, there are enough drugs for only 200
patients, and doctors launched the program today with medicines for only
six. Made of combinations of generic copies of the costly antiviral
drugs that prolong the lives of AIDS patients in the United States, the
medication will cost the Indian government about $1 a day for each
recipient.
During the first phase of the Indian government program, the drugs will
be distributed with priority first to mothers who are HIV positive and
who participated in a program that gave a short course of drugs to them
during childbirth. Although the program can cut in half the number of
infants who contract HIV from their mothers, without lifelong treatment,
those mothers will eventually die of AIDS. The second priority will be
to give the drugs to HIV-positive children who are below the age of 15,
and the third priority will go to what the government calls "full-blown
AIDS cases”.
Complete story at:
http://www.aegis.org/news/sc/2004/SC040402.html
AIDS Care at TB Clinics in Kolkatta
(The Telegraph Kolkatta, April 6, 2004)
The Kolkatta (Calcutta) Health Department is merging treatment of
HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis. The overwhelming number of AIDS patients who
are co infected with TB prompted this decision. The HIV/TB treatment
program, though in practice already, was officially launched on April 7,
2004, World Health Day. Under this new program, all TB hospitals in the
state will admit and treat HIV-positive and AIDS patients who have
developed TB symptoms. Beds at the seven TB hospitals in the state, left
unoccupied due to success of the DOTS program, will be utilized for the
increasing number of AIDS patients who have developed TB.
Source: CDC
TB-Related News and Journal Items Weekly Update, April 11 to 17, 2004
Web Call: Stop-TB eForum re-launched
Stop-TB eForum was re-launched on World TB Day 2004. The
Forum will aim to provide a platform for debate and advocacy. The
importance of multi-stakeholder participation is essential for the
control and elimination of TB and the Forum is expected to foster this
relationship by identifying new partners and open up fresh avenues to
provide the means for raising funds. In order to dispel the myths
surrounding the disease it is essential that public awareness be
heightened through discussions, these deliberations can be easily
generated and resolved through the forum. The forum will thus spearhead
the process of TB control and help bridge the communication divide that
exists in its many elements.
If you wish to join the Forum, send a blank message to:
join-stop-tb@eforums.healthdev.org
Editors
Dr. Dinesh Kumar
Director Health and Development Initiative India
email: dinesh_kumar@vsnl.com , dinesh@healthinitiative.org
Dr. Jatinder Singh
Executive Editor, Health and Development Initiative India
email : jatindersingh@vsnl.com
, jatinder@healthinitiative.org
Web Management VS Christopher
Webmaster Health and Development Initiative India
email : job340@hotmail.com
, webmaster@healthinitiative.org
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