-The Indian Express Public and private efforts must converge to battle it. With two decades of high economic growth, India should have been on its way to controlling Tuberculosis. Yet it remains an urgent public health problem. With 1,000 Indians dying every day of TB, and with the highest number of TB patients in the world, India is undoubtedly the crucial battleground for TB control. The enhanced detection of drug-resistant TB has...
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Rulebook on TB treatment -GS Mudur
-The Telegraph New Delhi: India's health ministry will tomorrow release the country's first-ever rulebook on Tuberculosis that medical experts hope will help curb wrong treatment in the private sector and improve results in public-sector clinics. The Standards for TB Care in India (STCI) prescribe ways to diagnose and treat the disease, a bacterial infection that requires multiple drugs to be administered for at least six months - and up to two years...
More »After battle with MDR-TB, they emerged winners -Malathy Iyer
-The Times of India MUMBAI: "It is a miracle I'm alive," said 31-year-old Borivli resident Deepti Chavan, who was given six months to live in 2004. Multi-drug-resistant Tuberculosis (MDR-TB) had literally eaten away her left lung and doctors were skeptical she would live for long. Drug-resistant TB is emerging as one of the biggest health challenges-more and more are getting infected (see box) even as the number of effective medicines is shrinking....
More »A million missing patients -Nalini Krishnan
-The Hindu Until activists and patients question approaches to prevention, diagnosis and treatment, TB will continue to plague us Tuberculosis in India is big: 2.3 million cases, 30,000 deaths, a million missing patients. These terrifying numbers remind us of a continuing crisis - when every TB death is preventable. Behind these numbers are innumerable unheard stories of human suffering - of misdiagnosis, inappropriate treatment and lack of access to care resulting in...
More »TB control: five key reasons to engage the private sector -Dr. Vijai Kumar Ratnavelu and Dr. Madhukar Pai
-The Hindu Not only is Tuberculosis not going away, we are now seeing severe forms of multi-drug resistant Tuberculosis (MDR-TB) India accounts for a quarter of the 8.6 million cases of TB that occur worldwide. India also accounts for a third of the ‘missing 3 million TB cases' that do not get diagnosed or notified. Not only is TB not going away, we are now seeing severe forms of multi-drug resistant TB...
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