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TB News from India: September-October 2002 Issue
(TB News from India is published by Health
and Development Initiative-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:
Charge of DOTS brigade
As the march of DOTS expansion continues in India, seven
states and one centrally administered territory had achieved a
hundred percent coverage at the end of second quarter of this
year. These states are Himachal Pradesh and Delhi in north,
Rajasthan in west, Kerala and Tamilnadu in south and Sikkim and
Manipur in east of the country. The centrally administered
territory is Chandigarh. This indeed is an encouraging
development.
However on the other end of spectrum are the states of Jammu and
Kashmir, Uttranchal, Chattisgarh, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mijoram,
Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh, which have yet to begin DOTS
implementation.
Even in the Hindi heartland states of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and
Madhya Pradesh the presence of Revised National Tuberculosis
Control Programme (RNTCP- implementing DOTS in India) is only
marginal. The health systems in these states are not as robust
as they are in the states that have achieved full coverage. The
DOTS brigade needs the wholehearted cooperation of politicians,
bureaucrats, health care providers and public in order to make
an impact in these resource deficient states.
JOINING THE DOTS
India's new programme for controlling TB is working, but not yet
fast enough for the millions affected.
A story in The Economist dated June 22,2002 analyses the current
scene of TB control in India
Lala is a young man but not a healthy one. Weight loss has
pinched his face, giving it the shape of India; his silences end
in coughs. Lala stopped taking medicine for tuberculosis (TB)
because he started feeling better and ran out of money at
roughly the same time. Now the disease is back and he can no
longer afford treatment. He may be among the half-million
Indians who will die this year from TB, which kills five times
as many as malaria, striking mainly those in their prime.
These are avoidable tragedies. Tuberculosis is almost always
curable, and the cure is not expensive. When death happens on an
Indian scale it is because the health system is not working. Few
Indians, knowing as they do that their state is riddled with
cracks just the right size for people like Lala to fall through,
are surprised when it does.
This is one failure that the Indian state has recently roused
itself to correct. Since 1998 India has introduced on a large
scale the internationally approved method for tackling TB. The
Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP) now
covers 460m of India's billion people, and is expected to reach
800m by 2004, but continued success is not assured. The
programme demands much from a public-health service that takes
in a scant 1% of GDP and misspends much of that. TB controls
"is basically a management problem," says Thomas
Frieden, who helped India expand the programme and is now New
York City's health commissioner.
How much can one expect from sprawling, chaotic India, where
patients often live miles from roads and the public health
system, notorious for absentee doctors and missing drugs, and is
often a last resort, even for the poor? At least 80% of
qualified doctors are in the private sector; their numbers are
exceeded by 1.25m unqualified practitioners. None has much stake
in DOTS, which takes away their customers.
"RNTCP can control only half the problem, not the full
problem, until it reaches the private sector," argues M. M.
Singh, head of India's Tuberculosis Association. Others think
that people will use the public system once word spreads that it
offers good, free care. Converting private doctors to DOTS, they
say, is less important than getting the scheme to the half a
billion people who still have no access to it.
The full text of the story is available at:
http://www.stoptb.org/material/news/press/Economist_020622.pdf
TB and Poverty linkages:
Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) Bulletin
Ever year, TB costs India Rupees 13,000 crore ($ 260,00,0000)
An article published in ICMR Bulletin, March 2002 edition which
examines the economic impact of tuberculosis in India says that
every year TB costs India more than Rupees 13,000 crore while
patients have to shell-out Rupees 645 crore ($ 129,00,0000)
annually on private care. Patients suffering from tuberculosis
incur a total loss of Rupees 3469 ($99) on expenses for
diagnosis and treatment. The article written by Mr. M. Muniyandi
and Dr. Rajeswari Ramachandran of Tuberculosis Research Center,
Chennai notes that lost work time and lost income from TB
morbidity are 3-4 months and about 20 per cent of annual
household income and the potential cost of lost productivity due
to TB is in the order of 4 to 7 per cent of GDP.
Studies carried out in different parts of the country have
discovered a high percentage of TB related debts-67 per cent of
rural and 75 per cent of urban patient have incurred debts on
account of treatment of TB-it said.
The adverse effects of TB were greatest for poor people, mainly
because their income depends exclusively on physical labor and
they had no savings to cushion the blow.
Urging for more funds for improving health services, the report
said that India was spending only 0.9 per cent of the GDP on the
health sector as against an average of 2.2 per cent by other
developing countries.
You can read the full article at: http://icmr.nic.in/bumarch02.pdf
Under-trial dies of TB
in Punjab
A news item datelined Ferozepore, August 7 2002,published in The
Tribune, Chandigarh says that a 72-year-old under-trial prisoner
lodged in the Central Jail, died of tuberculosis (TB) last
night. This is the sixth incident of death in the Central Jail
since the beginning of this year.
According to information received from the local Sub Divisional
Magistrate's office, Maridu, a resident of Rukna Begu village
was booked under Section 420 of the IPC on June 30 this year and
was under judicial custody. He was suffering from TB, a chronic
disease, from the past many years. The jail authorities admitted
him to the Civil Hospital yesterday morning when he suffered
from a chest pain and had some breathing problem. But he died
late in the evening.
Link to the story: http://www.tribuneindia.com/2002/20020808/punjab1.htm#27
New TB vaccine ineffective
in HIV cases
A news item published in Times News Network dateline Pune July
26, 2002, says that doctors associated with Serum Institute
India Limited (SIIL) have advised not to administer doses of the
newly launched BCG vaccine to those children whose mothers have
tested sputum positive and HIV positive.
According to SIIL medical director Dr S. Bharadwaj, the chances
of protecting an HIV-infected child from tuberculosis are
minimal.
While pointing out that the efficacy of the indigenously
developed vaccine is 83.8 per cent compared to other BCG
vaccines with 80.3 per cent efficacy, he said the newly launched
vaccine is best suited for children less than six years of age.
"The effects of the vaccine given to a child above six
years may not show the desired results," he added.
Link to the story:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow.asp?artid=17095483&sType=1
Surge in HIV positive cases
in Kerala
An IANS news story from the capital of Kerala;
Thiruvananthapuram published in Times of India dated 19th July
2002 says that the image of Kerala as a state with healthy
people has come under a cloud with a large number of HIV
positive cases that have been steadily increasing.
Health Minister P. Sankaran said that HIV positive cases in
Kerala are on the increase, with Thiruvananthapuram district
having the highest number of cases.
He said: "The number of HIV positive cases in the state is
anywhere between 70,000 and 100,000. The districts of Kozhikode
and Thiruvananthapuram lead because of the large size of the
expatriate population there. Most of those who appear to have
contracted the disease get it from Mumbai."
The project director of the state AIDS Control Society, M.N.
Gunawardhan, said: "We have launched a programme where
people have been categorised into high risk and low risk
categories.
"The high risk group consists of truck drivers, plantation
workers and similar categories of people. We conduct regular
classes for them and review the impact. For the low risk group,
we run an awareness campaign with the NGOs. We also conduct
classes for school students in the state".
Reports indicate that the HIV positive figures in the state
could be highly deflated as it is hard to believe that the
number of full-blown cases of AIDS in Kerala is a mere 819.
"Availability of funds is not a problem. We get aid from
the federal government and other agencies. The real problem is
reaching out to the masses", said Gunawardhan, who is also
joint secretary for health in the state administration.
Read the full text of story at:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow.asp?artid=16488819&sType=1
Web-call: A visit to
TB-INDIA website (www.tbindia.net)
The website aims to disseminate information about TB, improve TB
care and allow NGOs to and physicians to interact. It has a
sizeable amount of information for physicians with an emphasis
on diagnosis, treatment, control; TB & HIV related issues
and a section on drug resistance. A compendium of facts on TB
under the FAQ section provides comprehensive answers to certain
common but intriguing queries. There is a link to abstracts from
the Indian Journal of Tuberculosis, which mostly consists of
research papers on the newer developments in TB in the Indian
context. Online help in order to facilitate the treatment
category, a quiz and slide show are some of the highlights of
the site. The links section lists some fairly good websites on
the disease. This India based website surprisingly has no
information on the team behind the concept, which is a dampener
on the credibility of the information provided.
This is a good site for those who encounter TB patients on a
regular basis and would like to learn more about the finer
points of diagnosis and treatment of the disease.
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