1 / 15

Tuberculosis in India: A Critical Analysis

Tuberculosis in India: A Critical Analysis. Lynette Menezes, MSW. Incidence and Prevalence. Global Leading cause of death world wide One third of the world infected 6 million cases globally India Leading cause of mortality – 1000 deaths daily

Download Presentation

Tuberculosis in India: A Critical Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tuberculosis in India: A Critical Analysis Lynette Menezes, MSW

  2. Incidence and Prevalence • Global • Leading cause of death world wide • One third of the world infected • 6 million cases globally • India • Leading cause of mortality – 1000 deaths daily • Estimated incidence 185 per 100,000 new cases • Absence of recent national epidemiologic data

  3. Critical Analysis • Factors that impact control of TB in India • Epidemiological processes • Political and economic history • NTP implementation • Social inequalities • Cultural attitudes and beliefs • Socio-economic impact on families • Revised National Tuberculosis Control Program • Role of Multinational Organizations

  4. Epidemiological Process • Two important factors • crowded living conditions • absence of native resistance • Risk of infection • closeness of contacts • infectiousness of the source • degree of sputum positivity • pattern of coughing

  5. Historical Factors - 1 • Called rajyaroga (king of diseases). • Recorded in sacred texts • 1900 - 1947 • freedom struggle • no clear policy on TB control • tuberculosis Association of India (TAI) • world war II caused shortages • severe Bengal famine

  6. Historical Factors - 2 • 1947-1950 • gained independence • influx of 10 –15 million refugees • 80% below poverty threshold • < 5% of 2.5 million received treatment • Constitution, Art 47 – relates to health provision • 1956-1965 • Balance of payments of crisis • 58 million vaccinated - effective ?? • Largest prospective BCG study

  7. National Tuberculosis Program • Goals & Objectives • eliminate death and disability • break the chain of transmission • Implementation problems • inadequate infrastructure • food and economic crisis • competing programs • political instability

  8. NTP- Structural Factors • Urban-rural disparity • inadequate rural infrastructure • health personnel • drugs • sputum microscopy facilities • Interstate disparity • no extra inputs into resource poor states • Private sector - 75% health expenditure • No clear TB policy and monitoring

  9. NTP- Other Issues • Patient factors linked to poverty • reduction of symptoms • costs of treatment • lack of social support • lack of patient education • rude treatment • Patient follow-up • lack of personnel • false addresses

  10. Social Inequalities • Poverty • overcrowding • inadequate nutrition • lack of knowledge • Gender differentials • higher direct costs for women • higher rate of morbidity • less use of health services • social Stigma

  11. Cultural Factors • Attitudes and beliefs • stigma • isolation • divorce • ostracism • beliefs regarding causation • sex related • physical and mental stress • food/water

  12. Socio-economic Impact • Human Costs • 4.56 - 6.28 million DALYS • Economic costs • loss of work days • medical and non-medical • Other costs • impact on children • inadequate food, clothing, books • inability to care for children • school absences and drop out • early employment to support family

  13. Role of International Organizations - 1960-1980 • Complacency • Belief in supremacy of medical model • Other health priorities • Focus on selective health care • Reduced funding to TB programs

  14. RNTCP Problems • Multi drug resistance • HIV/AIDS infection • DOTS • impractical in rural conditions • patients cultural beliefs • human rights • Inadequate infrastructure • Lack of motivated personnel • No control over private providers • Absence of strong national policy • Inadequate funds

  15. Recommendations • Interdisciplinary perspective • Update epidemiological data • Need for ethnographic research • focus on gender and class differentials • Revise current DOT strategy • Increase funding for TB intervention • Investigate policies of international funding organizations

More Related