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TB News from India:
September-October 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:
Message from Bangkok: Fight AIDS, Fight TB, Fight now
The message from XV International AIDS Conference (IAC) held at Bangkok in
July this year is loud and clear, " HIV/AIDS cannot be tackled in
isolation from other diseases like tuberculosis (TB). Nelson Mandela, the
octogenarian leader from AIDS ravaged South Africa set the ball rolling
the moment he arrived at the majestic Impact Convention Centre, venue of
XV IAC. He declared, "The world has made of AIDS its top priority. This is
a blessing, but TB remains ignored. Today, we are calling on the world to
recognise that we
cannot fight AIDS unless we do much more to fight TB as well."
TB is the leading killer of people infected with HIV. Up to 50% of people
with HIV or AIDS develop TB. Worldwide 14 million people are co-infected
with TB and HIV. TB control can contribute to better HIV/AIDS control both
by reducing the TB burden in people with HIV and by providing an entry
point to HIV prevention and care for people with TB.
The 3 by 5 initiative has set up an ambitious target to get 3 million
people in developing and middle-income countries on antiretroviral (ARV)
treatment by 2005. However without good TB control many of those alive
with HIV today may not live to see the day by the time ARV programmes
become available.
Deadlier In Combination
Editorial in The Hindu, 4th July 2004
India has far more tuberculosis (TB) cases than any other country, which
is bad enough. Nearly two million people in India develop the
disease every year and one person dies of it every minute, making
tuberculosis the leading killer among infectious diseases in this
country. In addition, India is second only to South Africa in the number
of people infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus( HIV) that
causes the Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). It is estimated
that there are already about four million HIV-infected people in India.
The combination of TB and HIV makes for a lethal mix. Most people who
get infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (which causes TB) do not
develop the disease, as their immune system is able to keep the
bacterium in check. But once an HIV infection cripples the immune
system, it paves the way for a dormant TB infection to become active.
HIV infected people are also less able to withstand new TB infections.
While a person with only TB infection has just a 10 per cent lifetime
risk of developing active tuberculosis, the risk is six times higher for
those infected with both TB and HIV. There is also evidence that
tuberculosis accelerates the progression of an HIV infection into
full-blown AIDS. Not only is tuberculosis the most common opportunistic
infection among HIV positive people in India, but it also substantially
increases the chances of death due to HIV.
The advent of HIV has also made diagnosis of tuberculosis more
difficult, observes the Government's National AIDS Control
Organisation (NACO) in its "Guidelines for Management of TB in HIV
Infected." If TB occurs in the early stages of HIV infection when
immunity is only partially compromised, it usually manifests as typical
tuberculosis that affects the lung. But as the HIV infection
advances, patients can develop other lung infections that resemble
tuberculosis or forms of tuberculosis that affect other parts of the
body (extrapulmonary TB). "The definitive diagnosis of extra-pulmonary
TB is often difficult because of the paucity of diagnostic
facilities, and at times difficulty in accessing the affected tissue for
intervention," say the NACO guidelines.
With over half of India's adult population infected with Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, there have been warnings that the spread
of HIV could lead to "a potentially explosive increase" in tuberculosis.
A study published recently by scientists at the Tuberculosis Research
Centre in Chennai suggested that HIV infection is on the rise among TB
patients in Tamil Nadu (a south Indian state). Scientists at the All
India Institute of Medical Sciences in Delhi have also drawn attention
to the increasing prevalence of HIV
among TB patients at their hospital.
Meanwhile, health professionals worry that the country's separate TB and
HIV control programmes are running in isolation. Only if the two control
programmes work together for the early diagnosis and treatment of
tuberculosis, and secure the cooperation of private
health care providers for these efforts, is there a realistic chance of
stemming the pestilence.
Read the full text of editorial at:
http://www.thehindu.com/2004/04/07/stories/2004040703241000.htm
Kolkata Municipal Corporation plays Catch-22 with TB patients
Ravik Bhattacharya, The Statesman, August 18 2004
Their fate rendered them homeless and for that precise reason, Kolkata
Munucipal Corporation (KMC) is depriving them of treatment.
Hundreds of TB patients have been denied free medication in KMC-run DOT
centres because they do not have a permanent residence.
Rathin Halder (50) stays in a slum by the side of the Circular railway
tracks in Baghbazar. A tuberculosis patient, Haldar has been
refused treatment in a DOT center because he failed to produce
residential proof, needed for registration. And he's just one of the
hundreds who have been turned away. There are 95 TB centres run by the
KMC across the city. These have been set up to provide TB medicines
under the DOT programme.
First the patient is diagnosed at the Mayor's chest clinic. Once the
disease is detected, free medicines are given to patients. "I thought
the centres were meant for our treatment. When I went there I was first
asked for residential proof. I live in a slum and could not produce one,
because of which the staff refused to register me. I could not pay for
my medicines nor do I have money to buy food. I am growing weak and will
not be able to earn any more," said Halder, a rickshaw puller.
Doctors plead helplessness. "We get critical TB patients, but cannot
treat them because they lack residential proof. We are bound by the laws
and cannot give medicines for free," said a doctor in a Baghbazar
centre. "I used to stay near the canal. After being
evicted, I built a shanty across Canal East Road. I know I have TB but
cannot buy medicines. I went to the DOT centre but was not given
medicines because I don't have a permanent residence. Since I also do
not have a voter ID card and live in a slum, the councillor did not give
me a residential certificate. If I had money to buy a house why should I
go looking for free medicines?" Sabitri Ram, a domestic help, wanted to
know.
Read the full story at:
http://www.thestatesman.net/page.arcview.php?clid=22&id=79919&usrsess=1
Abandoned girl diagnosed with TB
Tribune News Service, July 13 2004
Eight-year-old Pooja, who was abandoned by her brother, is suffering
from tuberculosis (TB). Her condition is stated to be serious. The girl
was admitted to General Hospital Chandigarh, yesterday by a social
worker, who found her crying at Raghunath temple in Sector 15 on the
night of July 11. The malnourished girl had been abandoned by her
brother, her only surviving relation after their parents died a few
years ago. The doctors attending to the child say that her X-ray results
have confirmed that she is suffering from tuberculosis.
Dr Rahul Kakkar, who is handling the child's treatment, says that the
child is malnourished and has oedema in her feet. "As of now we cannot
say if she will pull through. Though we have started treatment, she will
begin to respond to the treatment only after 15
days," he says. Dr Kakkar says that the girl is still in a delirious
state and is not responding to anybody.
Meanwhile, attendants of patients in the Emergency Ward at the hospital
have taken upon themselves the opportunity of attending on
her.
Read the full story at:
http://www.tribuneindia.com/2004/20040714/cth1.htm#9
Drive to treat tribal TB cases
The Statesman, June 21 2004
The North Dinajpur district (in West Bengal) administration today
conducted a door-to-door survey in Lichutola and Pirdangi villages
under Raignaj police station, to identify the tuberculosis patients who
have allegedly been facing neglect for years and to arrange for
their proper treatment.
Raiganj SDO Mr KN Dew and BDO Mr.S Dukpa, along with a medical team,
visited the villages and asked the people affected by tuberculosis to
visit the government hospital. The survey revealed that around 25 people
from the tribal communities have been suffering from this disease for
years mainly due to lack of proper food. But, neither the district
health authorities nor the Harsamaj - an organization set up with an
objective to help the tribal communities - have come forward to help
them with medical facilities.
Read the full story at:
http://www.thestatesman.net/page.arcview.php?clid=10&id=74637&usrsess=1
Steps To Ensure Medicine Supply To Hospital Treating MDR-TB Patients
The Hindu, 25th June 2004
The health authorities have made arrangements for purchasing increased
quantities of second-line tuberculosis drugs at the Government TB
hospital in Pulayanarkotta in Kerala State of India, so that more
patients suffering from multidrug-resistant TB (MDR TB) in the waiting
list can be roped in for immediate treatment.
Inconsistencies in fund flow and procedural delay had hit the free
supply of second-line tuberculosis drugs in the TB hospital. A team of
district health administration officials, including the District Medical
Officer and the head of the Department of Respiratory Medicine at the
Medical College hospital had visited Pulayanarkotta following reports
about the non-availability of drugs at the hospital.
Though 40 patients suffering from MDR TB, a highly infective strain of
the disease, have been registered as inpatients here, the hospital could
supply drugs for only 16 persons, while the rest have been included in
the waiting list. About 13 more patients in the waiting list would also
receive the drugs for MDR TB by the end of the week, while arrangements
were being made for procuring more funds, hospital sources said.
"We have 40 registered MDR TB patients in the hospital and the treatment
expense for two years for each patient comes to Rs. 2 lakhs (US $ 4400
approximately). As the drugs are very expensive, we can procure these
only through tenders or through the Central Purchase Committee. The
treatment has to be consistent and we cannot put anyone on the drug
regimen unless we are sure that we can find the funds," a doctor pointed
out.
They said that the hospital administration and patient care at
Pulayanarkotta had been hampered by a perennial shortage of nursing and
other paramedical staff. According to sources, the district health
administration has been hard up to find people willing to work here
because of the infectious nature of the disease
Read the full story at:
http://www.thehindu.com/2004/06/25/stories/2004062514420300.htm
Government's TB Project Fosters Drug-Resistant Variety
Abantika Ghosh, Times News Network, July 26, 2004
Delhi government's tuberculosis treatment poster project, DOTS is plagued by
a high dropout rate. With the result that even by official
estimates, about 4,000 new patients of the drug resistant variety of the
disease are added every year to the existing pool in Delhi. The
total number of new cases of TB annually, is about 31,500. DOTS was started
in 1997, interestingly to stem the same problem of multi-drug resistant (MDR)
TB.
According to figures available with the Delhi government, till June 2004,
1,77,859 TB patients have been treated under DOTS. Dr R P
Vashist, in-charge of the programme, says, "The cure rate is about 83%, in
4.5% of the cases the drug is found to be ineffective. About 9-10% of the
patients do not complete the course." Which means the last 15% of the
patients annually swell the ranks of MDR TB patients.
Read the full story at:
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/789987.cms
Indian scientists develop new TB vaccine
Indian scientists have developed a new tuberculosis vaccine and found it
to be safe and effective for low immunity cases too in the animal-trial
stage. The candidate vaccine, a possible weapon against tuberculosis,
which has resurfaced as a killer especially in
combination with AIDS, has been developed by the scientists at the
Central Drug Research Institute (CDRI), Lucknow. The vaccine is a live
form of a different strain of Mycobacterium, the bacteria that cause
tuberculosis, a Council of Scientific and Industrial Research
report said. The vaccine was found to be effective in protecting against
TB infection -- 70 percent of vaccinated mice when infected with
tuberculosis survived while unvaccinated mice died within 25 days of
infection, the report said. The vaccine was also evaluated in mice that
were made to be immuno-compromised as happens in AIDS. Growth of
infection was restricted in vaccinated mice, it said.
The report said that BCG is currently the only anti-TB vaccine. Though
it has provided protection against TB, the variation in its
efficacy warrants development of an improved vaccine.
Read the full story at:
http://www.rediff.com/news/2004/aug/24tb.htm
Indian
Corporates Turn HIV Friendly
HIV POLICY: L&T, HSBC and 750 other Mumbai business
houses say yes
Prachi Jatania, Indian Express, August 21, 2004
HIV stopped being an alien word in the Mumbai corporate world this week.
With about 1,500 corporate houses on its rolls, the Bombay Chamber of
Commerce and Industry has prepared a non-discriminatory HIV policy for
companies. Half of these corporate houses have already adopted the
guidelines. Industrial giants such as the Birla group, the Tatas,
Hindustan Lever Ltd and banking groups have shown keen interest. ''It's
a wish list, but at least there are guidelines we can adopt to battle
ignorance, '' says Malini Thadani, HSBC senior president, corporate
affairs. For corporate houses investing in staff welfare, increasing
susceptibility of its work force to the deadly virus is reason enough to
translate such a policy-on paper into action. The policy aims to protect
all employees against discrimination. While companies such as Siemens
India, Tata Steel, the Wockhardt group and GlaxoSmithKline have
awareness programmes in place, there is no specific non-discriminatory
policy for employees alone.
Read the full story at:
http://www.indianexpress.com/full_story.php?content_id=53521
Audit
Report Criticises India's Slow Progress On AIDS
An Indian government audit has said that the National AIDS Control
Programme has achieved only limited success because of slow
implementation, unachieved targets, and ineffective public education. In
a report presented to the Indian parliament last week, India's
comptroller and auditor general said that various activities under the
programme could not be conducted efficiently for lack of infrastructure,
drugs, equipment, and human resources. The report, which examined the
programme's activities between 1999 and 2003, has listed among the
deficiencies misconceptions about HIV transmission, a shortfall in the
training of doctors, nurses, and technicians, and the failure of
marketing of condoms. It said targeted intervention, viewed as the most
effective strategy to stop the spread of HIV in high-risk populations,
"had not been conducted effectively."
The latest sentinel survey indicates that India now
has 5.1 million people infected with HIV. Earlier this month the
National AIDS Control Organisation, which manages the programme, had
said there was a "visible decline" in the number of new HIV infections
in India: 520,000 in 2003, compared with 610 000 in 2002. "The
prevention efforts have definitely made an impact," said Meenakshi Datta
Ghosh, director of the organisation. However, the audit report has said
that poor awareness of methods to prevent HIV infection is alarming,
particularly among commercial sex workers and their clients. Citing an
independent survey, it said that just half of the general population and
two thirds of female sex workers were aware of how to prevent HIV
infection and only a fifth of the general population knew that HIV could
not be transmitted through mosquito bites and shared meals.
Although the programme aimed at achieving condom use by at least 90% of
commercial sex workers, the report points out that condom use in this
group is 57%. Health ministry officials concede that aggressive
promotion of condoms is needed. A high-ranking official said that a
directive from the previous government to ban condom promotion through
television "might have sent the wrong message." But with the change in
government earlier this year-and a new health minister in place condoms
will be back on television, the official said.
Read the full story at:
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/329/7460/252-b
News from India's
neighbours
Tuberculosis: 'DOTS' Strategy Saves Half A Million Infections
In China
Cases of tuberculosis have fallen by a third in areas of China
where doctors have implemented the DOTS strategy to combat this disease,
according to a study published on Saturday. The study, which appeared in
British medical weekly The Lancet, assessed the performance of a DOTS
programme backed by the World Bank that was launched in 1991 in 13 out of
the 31 Chinese provinces, accounting for 560 million people. In 2000,
prevalence of TB in these 13 provinces was 32 percent lower than in 15
other provinces, which did not follow the DOTS strategy. Around 660,000
cases of TB were prevented in 2000 thanks to the programme, the study
estimated.
China has 1.4 million new cases of TB every year, "more than any country
except India," the authors, a group of epidemiologists called the China
Tuberculosis Control Collaboration, say. The country is particularly
vulnerable to the spread of TB because of its huge population of migrant
workers, who often live and work in poor, crowded conditions.
On July 23, China's state media announced the country would dramatically
increase funding for the fight against TB, and the DOTS programme would be
the chief beneficiary. "Hundreds of millions of Yuan" (tens of millions of
dollars) will be spent, compared with just 40 million Yuan (4.8 million
dollars) annually as at present, according to the English-language China
Daily. The annual death toll from TB in China ranges from 130,000, as
reported in the China Daily, to 150,000, as estimated by the World Bank. -
AFP
Read the full story at:
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world/view/98335/1/.html
TBNI Editorial Team
Dr. Dinesh Kumar,
dinesh_kumar@vsnl.com
Dr. Jatinder Singh,
jatindersingh@vsnl.com
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