India's plan to eliminate tuberculosis by 2025: converting rhetoric into reality

نویسندگان

  • Madhukar Pai
  • Soumyadeep Bhaumik
  • Soumitra S Bhuyan
چکیده

Correspondence to Professor Madhukar Pai; [email protected] The Government of India announced its plan to eliminate tuberculosis (TB) by 2025 during the Union Budget address last month. The declaration is extraordinarily ambitious, considering that India accounts for 27% of the world’s 10.4 million new TB cases, and 29% of the 1.8 million TB deaths globally. India also accounts for 16% of the estimated 480 000 new cases of multidrug-resistant TB. The End TB Strategy by WHO aims to end the global TB epidemic, with targets to reduce TB deaths by 95% and to cut new cases by 90% by 2035. While high-level political commitment is welcome and necessary, the real question now is how India can go from rhetoric to real progress? We offer some suggestions that might help bridge the gap between ambition and reality. First and foremost, India needs to give priority to and begin investing in health. For decades, governmental expenditure on health has been one of the lowest in the world at 1.4% of the GDP (but even lower in the previous years). While the 2017 Union Budget has allocated additional funding for health, the allocation will substantially fall short of the 2.5% of the GDP that has been considered a realistic goal in the draft National Health Policy 2015. The budget for India’s Revised National TB Control Program (RNTCP) also needs to see an increase. Despite being a highly costeffective programme, RNTCP has struggled to receive funding that is commensurate with the scale of India’s epidemic. There was anticipation of a tripling of the budget for the period 2012–2017, but this did not happen. In February 2017, the RNTCP published a draft of a new National Strategic Plan (NSP) for TB Elimination 2017–2025. It is expected that the cost of implementing the new NSP will be nearly US$2.5 billion, a significant increase over the 2012–2017 NSP budget. In the 2017 Union Budget, there is some indication that TB will get a higher allocation, but a recent analysis suggests that, after adjusting for purchasing power parity, the funds available for RNTCP could be even lower, at a time when the new NSP aims for TB elimination by 2025. India must start to seriously tackle key determinants of TB, especially poverty, undernutrition and tobacco smoking, which have been clearly linked with TB and mortality due to TB. This will require intersectoral collaboration between multiple ministries, agencies and civil society. There is also significant opportunity for inclusion of TB in social protection programmes, which can focus on prevention as well as protect patients from impoverishment. Additionally, India must address the major gaps that have already been identified in the TB cascade of care in the public system. About half million TB patients reach public health facilities but are either not successfully diagnosed, or not started on treatment. To address these gaps, RNTCP will need to modernise its TB standard of care and control system. India relies heavily on antiquated approaches, including smear microscopy, intermittent drug regimens and paper-based reporting. In order to improve this system, India needs to scale-up rapid molecular diagnostics such as Xpert MTB/ RIF (Cepheid, California), make drugsusceptibility testing (DST) more widely accessible and switch to daily drug regimens, combined with tools for adherence support. In fact, in January 2017, responding to activist petitions, the Indian Supreme Court ordered the RNTCP to switch from intermittent therapy to an internationally accepted daily regimen. India’s TB control programme must begin to recognise the role of the private sector and start engaging with it more meaningfully. Enormous quantities of anti-TB drugs are used in the private sector, underscoring their importance and scale. Although implementation of the RNTCP resulted in an increase in patients seeking care in public facilities,

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عنوان ژورنال:

دوره 2  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2016