Call to action for a TB-free India

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Kavita Ayyagari, Project Director-Challenge TB at The International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union) and Jamhoih (Jamie) Tonsing, Regional Director – The Union South- East office highlight the growing menace of TB and calls for concerted efforts to halt its advance

There were more than 20 deaths in a month due to Dengue in Delhi1 in 2015. There was a big hue and cry, and newspapers carried stories daily on the Dengue toll. There was the heart-breaking story of the little boy who died of Dengue because no hospital would take him. His parents committed suicide after his death.2 The State and the administration and the hospitals were all made accountable. One story shook the nation for the entire week. Dengue is a notifiable disease and it seems the state departments do get notifications for it3 and the state departments get rapped if there is inadequate attention on prevention and care as the public and media pressure is tremendous.

There are at least 21 deaths for TB in a day4 in the city of Mumbai alone. Across the country, two people die every three minutes5 due to TB, according to government figures. Somehow these stories never make any headlines. No one really knows what happened as someone quietly passes away from TB. No hue, no cry. No heart-breaking story here. One wonders why?

The TB situation in India is fairly alarming. India accounts for 23 per cent of the TB burden in the world. Being the second most populous country, the numbers are, of course, large. But for an ancient airborne infectious disease that has survived centuries, the numbers can be ominous as with every one case that goes un-detected or untreated, new cases will appear. A person who has active pulmonary TB can infect 10-15 others in the year, and remain infectious for two to three years if left untreated.6

India recorded the largest number of TB cases in the world last year.7 1.5 million people died in 2014 from the disease which now ranks alongside HIV as a leading killer worldwide.8 140,000 amongst them were children.9 Most of these deaths could have been prevented.

If unchecked, TB can become India’s most serious health crisis, acting as an obstacle to India’s progress in the years to come. It is imperative that India takes strong, coordinated action and addresses issues of TB prevention, diagnosis, access to treatment and support in the coming years.

The Government alone cannot tackle the TB monster. There is need for all round support from all stakeholders and partners, to ensure early and accurate diagnosis, correct treatment, treatment adherence, and economic support to families. The symptoms of TB are persistent cough and fever, loss of weight and appetite. People generally turn to the private doctor when they experience these symptoms. The first point of contact is the family physician or the doctor next door. It largely rests on the private sector to be able to diagnose TB early and advise treatment. This, in turn, requires them to test for TB, using WHO or RNTCP-approved diagnostics. If TB is confirmed, then it is critical for doctors to start the correct drug regimen and help patients complete the full course of therapy.

With TB, a person needs medical leave that may go beyond the usual sick leave. S/he requires leave for the period they are infectious. Therefore, TB patients need a workplace where their condition is recognized and they are not discriminated for. Thus, businesses, organizations and employers have a key role to play in the fight against TB.

Stigma is still an issue with TB in India, and patients may feel alienated or isolated within their communities or families. People may fear the disease and want nothing to do with persons suffering from TB. Young girls with TB may never get married because of stigma. Mothers may not be given care in the family and be forsaken or even sent back home, if they had TB. Families are broken when the main breadwinner cannot earn a living because of TB.

The good news is that TB is a treatable and curable disease. Therefore awareness is critical. The Call to Action for a TB-Free India echoes WHO’s ‘End TB Strategy’ and calls for the country to intensify TB care and prevention efforts to end TB in India. The vision of the End TB Strategy is ‘A World free of TB: Zero TB deaths, Zero TB disease, and Zero TB suffering.’ The Call to Action for a TB-Free India is a call to make India free from this disease and all of us must join to make a difference.

References

  1. http://indianexpress.com/article/cities/delhi/25-deaths-6400-cases-delhi-faces-worst-ever-dengue-outbreak/#sthash.I6pJ1ath.dpuf   

  2. http://indianex-press.com/article/india/india-others/7-year-old-dead-of-dengue-his-parents-kill-themselves/#sthash.CeSha5CZ.dpuf

  3. http://idsp.nic.in/idsp/IDSP/MedOff.pdf

  4. http://www.dnaindia.com/ mumbai/report-at-least-21-die-of-tb-each-day-ngo-white-paper-2106812 

  5. http://www.tbcindia.nic.in/rntcp.html

  6. Behr MA, Warren SA, Salamon H, et al. Transmission of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from patients smear-negative for acid-fast bacilli. Lancet 353 (9151):444-9.

  7. WHO, Global Tuberculosis Report 2015 (2015), Pg. 13

  8. WHO, Global Tuberculosis Report 2015 (2015), Pg. 8

  9. WHO, Global Tuberculosis Report 2015 (2015), Pg. 5

End TB strategygrowing burden of TBTB controlTB-free India