India faces the challenge of a range of infectious diseases. Every fifth new tuberculosis case in the world lives in the Indian subcontinent according to the Deutsche Lepra-und-Tuberkulosehilfe. Japanese Encephalitis is present in many areas of India and has caused serious epidemics in recent years. India has been less severely affected by the HIV epidemic than many other countries, despite early predictions of disaster, but still, has almost three million people living with the virus. Bacterial resistance is a growing threat because of the widespread misuse of broad-spectrum antibiotics.
Following are some articles that elaborate more on the situation of Infectious diseases in India.
Tuberculosis remains one of the most widespread infection within the Indian nation.
As stated in the Daily Mail, an estimated 40% of the population carries a form of the strain and, according to an article in The Hindu, reports show India being the country harboring the highest number of TB cases in 2014, followed by Indonesia and China. This comes after an increase of 29% in notifications following introducing mandatory national web-based notification methods in 2012.Concerns about resistant strains of TB are also growing in the country. A WHO report mentioned by Channel News Asia shows that India has the highest number of TB resistant strains in the world, and the person infected with the bacteria is estimated to transmit it to an estimated 15 people within a year. This trend is in line with the current state of bacterial resistance in the country which has been criticized for its high level of corruption, lack of sanitation and generally low adherence of patients. Nonetheless, research in the field of tuberculosis is still ongoing and new therapeutic treatments are developed for example in the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB) in Hyderabad, where new techniques aim to reduce bacterial resistance.
The outbreak of swine flu that claimed more than 1500 lives in February of 2015 may have been the result of a new mutated strain, according to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
This strain has been deemed more dangerous. At the time of the outbreak, Prime Minister Narendra Modi publicly urged the population not to enter a state of panic as he limited public gatherings in some of the major cities.In Maharashtra, 38 deaths and 378 cases of swine flu have been reported in the first eight days of September 2015. A new trend observed, is that 36% of the deaths occurred in healthy patients with no known previous illnesses. This is a new trend observed worldwide according to experts.
A fact sheet by CDC on MDR TB and XDR TB
Extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) is a rare type of MDR TB that is resistant to isoniazid and rifampin, plus any fluoroquinolone and at least one of three injectable second-line drugs (i.e., amikacin, kanamycin, or capreomycin).Because XDR TB is resistant to the most potent TB drugs, patients are left with treatment options that are much less effective.
Thousands of Malaria cases go untreated amid Ebola fears
Tens of thousands of malaria cases went untreated in Guinea last year as people with symptoms shunned health clinics for fear of being sent into isolation at Ebola treatment centers, according to authoritative research.A major paper from infectious diseases experts said 74,000 fewer people were diagnosed and offered malaria treatment than would have been expected. The research was based on a survey of public health facilities in December 2014 and interviews with healthcare workers.
Global Funding dips by 90% may cripple the war on HIV/AIDS
Emerging Infectious Diseases in India
A new article on statistics as provided by the WHO’s 2013 report and shows the government’s failure in tackling TB in India.
The World Health Organization’s 2013 global tuberculosis report paints a grim picture for India. Once a pioneer in TB treatment among developing nations, the government’s resolution to fight the disease has developed cracks over the years. According to the report, the country has 2-2.5 million TB cases — a conservative figure, given that worldwide three million cases go undetected each year. The other depressing fact is that 33 percent of the total population suffering from TB worldwide does not have access to treatment.
The fight against TB is getting progressively tougher as drug-resistant TB increasingly makes its presence felt. According to the WHO, around 450,000 people are victims of multi-drug resistant (MDR) type of TB with China, India, and Russia together accounting for most cases. MDR occurs when people stop taking medicines midway, making subsequent treatments more difficult and complicated. It has forced the WHO to change its earlier stand when it dissuaded countries like India from diverting resources for treating ordinary TB to boost drug-resistant TB programs. Now, it has urged countries to make MDR-TB part of the national program as it requires urgent attention.
The political will evident in nationwide polio programs is sadly missing in the case of TB. That makes the struggle even acuter.
Mumbai Health: Affluenza leading to spike in diseases
In an article published in the Times of India on July 31st, states that in Mumbai at least 40,000 people have died in Mumbai due to TB in the last five years.
Hepatitis C patients lack access to affordable treatment and care
The article published in July 2013 in the Hindu, stated that Hepatitis C can be treated and cured with newer drugs in the pipeline, which will simplify the treatment regimen and improve cure rates. Yet numerous hurdles, from healthcare-setting discrimination to drug prices, still need to be overcome so that access to treatment is equitable and does not overlook people who use drugs.
Viral hepatitis claims 2.50 lakh lives in India every year: Experts
In July 2013 the DNA published an article which stated that there are over 500 million people living with chronic hepatitis in the country.
Why tuberculosis is India’s biggest public health problem
Published in the Economic Times in June 2013, states that India is home to 2.2 million tuberculosis patients, making it the largest number in a single country. According to other estimates, one person dies of the disease every two minutes in India.
Malaria still a major threat in India
According to the article published in May 2013, states that while the number of Malaria cases in the country has fallen, it still remains to be a major threat in India.
India leads the world in dengue burden: Nature
According to a multinational study published by Nature, Dengue the world’s most rapidly spreading mosquito-borne viral disease is taking a far bigger human toll than was believed to be the case. As many as 390 million people across the globe could be falling victim to the virus each year.
1.3 billion in South-East Asia at risk of malaria: WHO
As reported in the Hindu, the WHO has stated that more funds are needed to ensure that more people, especially those living in high-risk areas, have access to long-lasting insecticidal nets, rapid diagnostic tests and laboratory equipment to detect the disease, and artemisinin-based combination therapy.
‘About 250,000 people die of viral hepatitis in India annually’
Dr. Ajit Sood, head of the department, gastroenterology at Dayanand Medical College and Hospital (DMCH), says “In particular, types B and C lead to chronic diseases in hundreds of millions of people and together, are the most common cause of liver cirrhosis and cancer. Hepatitis A and E are typically caused by ingestion of contaminated food or water. Hepatitis B, C, and D usually occur as a result of prenatal contact with infected body fluids”. “Approximately 1 in 12 persons worldwide, or some 500 million people, are living with chronic viral hepatitis. In India, about 250,000 people die of viral hepatitis annually”.
Centre for research on HIV vaccine set up
Parliamentarians and leaders pledged to provide scientists with “adequate resources” on par with international standards in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Former president A.P.J. Abdul Kalam launched the HIV Vaccine Translational Health Sciences and Technology Institute (THSTI) in New Delhi on Monday at a symposium on accelerating India’s search for an HIV vaccine. Continuing Challenge of Infectious Diseases in India
Published in 2011, authors T Jacob John, Lalit Dandona, Vinod P Sharma, Manish Kakkar write about the challenges of infectious diseases in India.
Battle against TB runs into diabetes hurdle
Healthcare workers fighting to control tuberculosis face a new challenge: diabetes in TB patients. Studies have found that nearly half the number of patients registered for treatment of infectious tuberculosis in Chennai and neighboring districts are diabetic. Doctors say diabetes in TB patients will not only make treatment difficult but make tuberculosis prevention a challenging task.
Urgent need for formal medical training in infectious diseases in India
An article published in the lancelet states that Infection, not heart disease, diabetes, or cancer, is the leading cause of death in India. National health-care policy for control and transmission of infection is under critical scrutiny.Whereas many specialties such as cardiology, nephrology, and pulmonology flourish in most Indian medical schools, the specialty of infectious diseases is non-existent. Despite being plagued with infections such as malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS, and antibiotic-resistant bacterial diseases, the medical educators of India have not taken steps to create formal training programs.
Sharp drop in HIV cases in India
India had witnessed a sharp decline in the number of new HIV cases — a 56 percent drop — in the past 10 years.“HIV infections have declined by 56 percent during the last decade from 2.7 lakh in 2000 to 1.2 lakh in 2009 in our country,” Indian Health and Family Welfare Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad said in the national capital.
DBT launches new initiatives to develop HIV vaccine in collaboration with IAVI
Big Pharma lobbies hard to curb generics
Treatment for multi-drug resistant TB now available in UP
The complete treatment for multi-drug resistant tuberculosis is now available in UP. The facility is available at King Georges Medical University’s Intermediate Reference Laboratory (IRL), which detects the bacteria of MDR-TB.
New, deadlier form of TB hits India
Tuberculosis, which kills around 1,000 people a day in India, has acquired a deadlier edge. A new entity-ominously called Totally Drug-Resistant TB (TDR-TB )-has have been isolated in the fluid samples of 12 TB patients in the past three months alone at Hinduja Hospital at Mahim. The hospital’s laboratory has been certified by the World Health Organization (WHO) to test TB patients for drug resistance.
TB declared notifiable disease
In a statement issued by the Union Health and Family Welfare Ministry said “that Notification of TB cases by all healthcare providers will help patients get better access to quality diagnosis and treatment. This will facilitate early diagnosis, rational treatment, prevention of complications and reduce deaths due to TB.”
India accounted for 47 percent of global measles death in 2010
“Delayed implementation of accelerated disease control in India” has led the country to account for “47 percent of estimated measles mortality in 2010” stated a paper published today (April 24) in The Lancet. At 36 per cent, even the World Health Organisation (WHO) African region accounted for lesser mortality than India.
TB that resists all drugs is found in India
Tuberculosis specialists in India have diagnosed infections in a dozen patients in Mumbai that are unfazed by the three first-choice TB drugs and all nine second-line drugs. The doctors are calling them “totally drug-resistant TB,” and the infections are essentially incurable with all available medicines.
Disease Burden in India: estimations and casual analysis
A good paper that gives a holistic view of the burden of diseases both economically and socially in India. the paper states that nearly 40% of the Indian population of all ages has Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection, and there are about 85 lakh people with TB at any given time. With more than 400,000 dying each year.
From despondency to optimism: 25 years of HIV in India
Today with an estimated 23.9 lakh HIV infections (of which 39% are females and 4.4% are children) India is home to the second largest population of people living with HIV – an epidemic which is concentrated in high-risk populations such as sex workers and their clients, men who have sex with men, transgender, and injecting drug users.
China outperforms India in tackling double burden of diseases
China has outperformed India in tackling the “double-burden” of diseases that includes infectious diseases affecting the poor on the one hand and chronic lifestyle ailments typical of fast urbanization on the other, a WHO report has said. While India’s life expectancy has shot up to 65 years in 2009, up from 61 years in 2000, China has improved the same to 74 years during the last 10 years.
“TB, malaria, kala-azar from 30% of India’s disease burden”
Despite success in tackling polio, leprosy, and AIDS, India still faces continuing threats from infectious diseases like tuberculosis, malaria and ‘kala-azar’ which constitute 30 percent of the country’s disease burden.
Report of the working group on disease burden for the 12th five-year plan
A report published by the planning commission of India talks in detail about the burden of communicable diseases in India.
Migrant population bears the highest burden of HIV in India
Migration is fuelling India’s HIV epidemic. National AIDS Control Organisation’s latest figures show that besides high-risk populations like sex workers, the highest burden of HIV is among migrants – 3.6%, which is 10 times the HIV prevalence among the general population.
TB in India: burden, progress, and needs
A report published by the Ministry of Health in India states that there are 1.93 million cases of TB annually. There are about 280,000 deaths per year and about 4.85% of all TB patients are HIV positive.
Controlling Malaria and eradicating Kala – Azar, and polio
India reports some 2 million malaria cases each year with about half being caused by Plasmodium Falciparum (Pf), a severe and an often fatal strain that is spreading rapidly. India also bears a high burden of other vector-borne diseases (VBD) such as dengue, Japanese encephalitis, lymphatic filariasis, and the sandfly-transmitted kala-azar which affects the poorest of the poor who live in unhygienic housing conditions.
Estimation of true malaria burden in India
Malaria continues to be one of India’s leading public health problems. The issue of malaria is one which crosses age, gender, and socio-economic boundaries and therefore there is a need to have a robust public health plan to combat this disease.
Typhoid sends droves of children to hospitals
Typhoid is caused by bacteria that spread through contaminated food and water, typhoid begins with a fever of over 103 degrees Fahrenheit and severe headache; in worst cases, it can lead to multiple organ failure and death.
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