India intensifies TB detection efforts to achieve its 2025 eradication goal.
Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare JP Nadda stated on Saturday that early detection of tuberculosis (TB) in India (1✔ ✔Trusted Source
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‘India's mission to eradicate #tuberculosis by 2025 is bold and inspiring! Can we achieve this ambitious goal? #EndTB #IndiaFightsTB’
“Today TB is detected early, thanks to the network of over 1.7 lakh Ayushman Arogya Mandirs across the country,” said the Union Health Minister, informing that many new strategies were taken to make TB services patient-friendly and decentralised. India's Renewed Push to End TB by 2025
Nadda said the campaign reflects the “government’s unwavering commitment to end TB” and stated that it will give a new momentum to the goal of TB-Mukt Bharat (TB-free India)". The Minister further informed that in the last 10 years, the government has also significantly scaled up diagnostic services. “The number of laboratories increased from 120 in 2014 to 8,293 laboratories today,” he said.“There was a time when TB was considered as a ‘slow death’ and even family members suffering from TB were separated and isolated to prevent its spread. And since 1962, there have been many campaigns against TB, but, in 2018 the Prime Minister made the vision to endTB much before the 2030 deadline of the Sustainable Development Goals,” Nadda noted. The campaign aims to increase case detection through intensified case-finding drives using advanced screening and diagnostic technologies to reduce delays in diagnosis and treatment initiation. Besides early detection, the campaign will also be expanded to reduce mortality due to TB, Nadda said.
The programme will open the doors “to novel initiatives such as the Differentiated TB Care to provide specialised care for high-risk patients and increased nutritional support through Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana”, he explained. Further, to counter drug-sensitive TB, the Union Government introduced a daily regimen including a new shorter, and more effective regimen. This “has improved the TB treatment success rate to 87 percent,” Nadda said.
He also lauded the government's move to make it mandatory for even private practitioners to notify any new TB patients so that their treatment can be followed up immediately. “This might look like a small step but it has led to an 8-fold increase in the rate of TB notifications in the private sector,” Nadda stated.
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Reference:
- Tuberculosis - (https://www.who.int/india/health-topics/tuberculosis)