Dubai Telegraph - After Covid, India tries to get on top of tuberculosis

EUR -
AED 4.221739
AFN 72.42195
ALL 96.020858
AMD 433.494163
ANG 2.057799
AOA 1054.141908
ARS 1605.37418
AUD 1.624033
AWG 2.072072
AZN 1.956718
BAM 1.956216
BBD 2.312592
BDT 140.889991
BGN 1.964944
BHD 0.433904
BIF 3409.199857
BMD 1.149555
BND 1.468745
BOB 7.962695
BRL 6.016654
BSD 1.148249
BTN 105.909466
BWP 15.656401
BYN 3.420428
BYR 22531.272227
BZD 2.309292
CAD 1.573321
CDF 2603.741289
CHF 0.90665
CLF 0.026491
CLP 1046.003057
CNY 7.99659
CNH 7.915788
COP 4258.536902
CRC 539.331228
CUC 1.149555
CUP 30.4632
CVE 110.288957
CZK 24.437268
DJF 204.464414
DKK 7.472795
DOP 70.087053
DZD 152.076946
EGP 60.260464
ERN 17.243321
ETB 180.867995
FJD 2.543332
FKP 0.867843
GBP 0.863807
GEL 3.12688
GGP 0.867843
GHS 12.497715
GIP 0.867843
GMD 84.489549
GNF 10066.449332
GTQ 8.800912
GYD 240.351163
HKD 9.004042
HNL 30.397528
HRK 7.533265
HTG 150.495309
HUF 390.848437
IDR 19524.037117
ILS 3.58941
IMP 0.867843
INR 106.148671
IQD 1504.120182
IRR 1518619.243421
ISK 143.200536
JEP 0.867843
JMD 180.619234
JOD 0.815036
JPY 183.193613
KES 148.69464
KGS 100.528364
KHR 4604.080197
KMF 493.158699
KPW 1034.599226
KRW 1715.158638
KWD 0.353016
KYD 0.956804
KZT 554.468029
LAK 24640.245163
LBP 102820.787438
LKR 357.546111
LRD 210.113813
LSL 19.316712
LTL 3.394336
LVL 0.695354
LYD 7.359599
MAD 10.787196
MDL 19.978253
MGA 4780.038316
MKD 61.633189
MMK 2413.653719
MNT 4105.387442
MOP 9.260171
MRU 45.779741
MUR 53.730046
MVR 17.772551
MWK 1990.632404
MXN 20.343842
MYR 4.509126
MZN 73.460046
NAD 19.316712
NGN 1577.429825
NIO 42.251199
NOK 11.124817
NPR 169.459969
NZD 1.966194
OMR 0.442006
PAB 1.148244
PEN 3.963544
PGK 4.951162
PHP 68.643361
PKR 320.749473
PLN 4.274562
PYG 7452.780967
QAR 4.197012
RON 5.093556
RSD 117.442229
RUB 93.405395
RWF 1675.764008
SAR 4.313987
SBD 9.255824
SCR 16.567608
SDG 690.882734
SEK 10.75655
SGD 1.469594
SHP 0.862464
SLE 28.282209
SLL 24105.59984
SOS 655.042288
SRD 43.19049
STD 23793.461461
STN 24.505963
SVC 10.047139
SYP 127.054517
SZL 19.302193
THB 37.302476
TJS 11.022598
TMT 4.029189
TND 3.391437
TOP 2.767851
TRY 50.805035
TTD 7.786658
TWD 36.654125
TZS 2994.5901
UAH 50.619496
UGX 4334.922774
USD 1.149555
UYU 46.679734
UZS 13882.955262
VES 512.984476
VND 30207.423772
VUV 137.446801
WST 3.144279
XAF 656.099517
XAG 0.01419
XAU 0.000229
XCD 3.106729
XCG 2.069341
XDR 0.815977
XOF 656.099517
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.175214
ZAR 19.190724
ZMK 10347.371931
ZMW 22.36076
ZWL 370.156146
  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.54

    -0.4%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    90.89

    -0.01%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.99

    0%

  • BTI

    1.0100

    60.94

    +1.66%

  • BCE

    0.6521

    25.9

    +2.52%

  • BCC

    1.7200

    71.72

    +2.4%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.95

    -0.17%

  • GSK

    0.3800

    53.77

    +0.71%

  • RIO

    2.0300

    89.86

    +2.26%

  • AZN

    2.1100

    192.01

    +1.1%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    16.4

    -0.91%

  • RELX

    0.3300

    34.47

    +0.96%

  • VOD

    0.1900

    14.6

    +1.3%

  • BP

    0.2300

    42.9

    +0.54%

After Covid, India tries to get on top of tuberculosis
After Covid, India tries to get on top of tuberculosis

After Covid, India tries to get on top of tuberculosis

When Covid-19 ripped through India in 2020-21, several million people are thought to have died. Desperate efforts to stem the pandemic hurt the battle against another huge killer: tuberculosis.

Text size:

India is the home to a quarter of the world's TB infections and an estimated half a million people died of the curable lung disease in 2020 in the South Asian nation -- a third of the global toll.

Because of the pandemic, global deaths from the "silent killer" rose in 2020 for the first time in more than a decade, reversing years of progress, the World Health Organization says.

In India, the number of new cases detected in 2020 actually fell by a quarter to around 1.8 million due to Covid restrictions and as the pandemic diverted resources.

Nearly two-thirds of people with TB symptoms did not seek treatment, according to a 2019-21 nationwide government survey released on World TB Day on Thursday.

Ashna Ashesh, 29, diagnosed with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis four years ago, saw how patients, many isolated and jobless because of lockdowns, struggled for support.

"They were incredibly afraid... They were reaching out for any kind of information that could be offered about how to access tests and medication," the public health professional with the Survivors Against TB collective told AFP.

"The impact has been immense... Covid has set back the fight against TB quite significantly. A recovery plan for TB is critical, both in India and globally."

India now faces an uphill battle to meet Prime Minister Narendra Modi's goal of ending the spread of TB by 2025, five years earlier than the UN's target.

Experts and survivors are calling for intensive grassroots campaigns to find "missing" cases, more vaccine funding and support to combat malnutrition, a major trigger for TB.

Kuldeep Singh Sachdeva from the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease said states need to increase services such as house-to-house visits and mass screenings.

"That's the only way now where you can eliminate TB," Sachdeva, who previously led the government's National Tuberculosis Elimination Program, told AFP.

- Silver lining -

Officially Covid has killed almost 520,000 Indians, but experts believe the true toll to be far higher.

The pandemic -- which saw Covid replace TB as the world's deadliest infectious disease -- did however have one silver lining: increased mask-wearing.

Sachdeva estimates this might have cut TB transmission by 20 percent. Additional diagnostic machines procured for Covid could be redeployed for TB, he added.

Mumbai -- a megapolis of 20 million people and a TB hotspot -- has rolled out a programme with young survivors such as Seema Kunchikorve, who was diagnosed with TB five years ago at 20, to keep current patients on track with medications.

"The treatment has a lot of (side) effects which patients can't take," Kunchikorve told AFP during a TB awareness play staged at a school in India's biggest slum Dharavi.

Vijay Chavan, who treats patients with drug-resistant TB at a Doctors Without Borders (MSF) clinic in Mumbai, said the Covid battle had shown the way to fight the older pandemic.

At the clinic, which treats children as young as five, patients spend hours undergoing check-ups beside brightly coloured wallpapers featuring famous comic characters, before collecting a large tray of pills for their treatments.

"If there is a political will for TB, just like Covid, it definitely will give us good results," he told AFP.

Y.Amjad--DT