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Nadda launches 100-day TB-free India campaign in Panchkula

Rate of tuberculosis decline in India has doubled from 8.3 per cent in 2015 to 17.7 per cent in 2024, says Union Health Minister Nadda
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Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare, Jagat Prakash Nadda and Haryana Chief Minister, Nayab Singh Saini at the launching of the 100 Days TB elimination campaign at Sector-5, Panchkula on Saturday. TRIBUNE PHOTO: RAVI KUMAR
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The rate of tuberculosis (TB) decline in India has doubled since 2015 and is ahead of the global average, Union Health Minister J P Nadda said on Saturday while inaugurating a nationwide campaign in Haryana’s Panchkula to reduce such cases and mortality due to it.

The 100-day TB elimination campaign will be implemented in 347 districts of 33 states where the prevalence of the disease is higher. The campaign is focused on enhancing detection, reducing diagnostic delays and improving treatment outcomes.

“Under this programme, we have taken detection, tests, treatment and supportive strategies forward in an accelerated way. I feel this 100-day programme will prove to be a milestone in making a ‘TB-mukt Bharat’ and it will have a far-reaching impact,” said Nadda.

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The Union health minister highlighted the country’s long struggle in its fight against tuberculosis, saying that at a time TB meant a ‘slow death’.

“Even family members suffering from TB were isolated to prevent its spread. Since 1962, there have been many campaigns against tuberculosis, but in 2018 the prime minister put forth a vision to end TB much before the 2030 deadline of the Sustainable Development Goals.”

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“We changed strategies to achieve the aim. Services have been decentralised and now, 1,73,000 AAMs (Ayushman Arogya Mandirs) will have the facilities to detect and treat tuberculosis,” said the Union health minister.

He also informed the gathering that molecular technologies have been introduced for TB detection. Additionally, a new and shorter regimen of TB treatment has started which will help increase compliance and fight TB, he said.

In 2014, there were 120 laboratories for TB detection and their number has now reached 8,293, said Nadda.

He highlighted that the rate of tuberculosis decline in India has doubled from 8.3 per cent in 2015 to 17.7 per cent in 2024, much ahead of the global average. Deaths due to tuberculosis have also reduced significantly in India by 21.4 per cent in the last 10 years, he said.

“Nikshay support worth Rs 3,338 crore has been provided through direct benefit transfer to over 1.17 crore tuberculosis patients,” the minister said. He highlighted that the government has increased Nikshay poshan amount recently from Rs 500 to Rs 1,000 and added energy boosters for the nourishment support for TB patients.

Nikshay Poshan is not only a policy decision, this is a financial commitment for people in the health sector to eliminate TB, he said.

Nadda added that the government has now made it mandatory for even private practitioners to notify any new TB patients so that their treatment can be followed up immediately.

“This might look like a small step but it has led to an eight-fold increase in the rate of TB notifications in the private sector,” he said.

The 100-day campaign underscores the Union government’s commitment to achieving the goal of end-TB by addressing the challenges of tuberculosis notification and mortality in India under the National TB Elimination Programme of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

Some of the key focus areas of the campaign are increasing access to advanced diagnostics, targeted screening among vulnerable groups, specialized care for high-risk individuals, and provision of expanded nutritional support.

Speaking about Haryana, he said, earlier, there were only 6 medical colleges. Now the number has grown to 15. The Haryana chief minister has announced to opening a medical college in each district, he said.

Nadda further said the number of undergraduate seats for doctors has increased from 650 in 2014 to 2,185 in Haryana. Similarly, the number of post-graduate seats increased from 243 to 889 now, he added.

On this occasion, Haryana Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini and state Health Minister Arti Singh Rao were also present.

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