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DEVELOPMENT REPORT: Tuberculosis
Control Program in India
By Jill Moss
Broadcast: December 9, 2002
This is the VOA Special English Development
Report.
There are more people with tuberculosis in India
than in any other country in the world. Each year, tuberculosis infects
about two-million people in India and kills nearly five-hundred-thousand
people. However, this is starting to change. Researchers
recently studied a tuberculosis control program in India. The study
says the program has saved about two-hundred-thousand lives and more
than four-hundred-million dollars.
The New England Journal of Medicine published
a study about the tuberculosis control program in October. The Indian
government started the program in nineteen-ninety-three. Since that
time, about three-and-one-half million patients have been examined for
tuberculosis. Almost eight-hundred-thousand patients have received medical
treatment.
Also, more than forty percent of India's population
can now get tuberculosis services. And more than two-hundred-thousand
health workers have been trained to examine and treat people with the
disease. This makes India's tuberculosis
control program one of the world's largest
public health programs.
Thomas Frieden of the United States was one
of the people who wrote the study. He says that India's tuberculosis
control program has strengthened the country's general health care system.
For example, he says the quality of work done in laboratories has improved.
However, Doctor Frieden says the program includes
only half of India. He says the goal is to continue the program while
extending it to the rest of the country. Doctor Frieden believes this
will be difficult because of health threats from the virus that causes
AIDS and because some forms of tuberculosis are resistant to drugs.
Currently, the World Health Organization estimates
that about one-third of the world's population are infected with the
bacteria that cause tuberculosis. Tuberculosis becomes active in only
about ten percent of all cases. However, it can remain in a victim's
lungs for years or even a lifetime.
Infected people spread tuberculosis by releasing
particles from their mouths when they cough, sneeze, spit or talk. Signs
of the disease include high body temperature and coughing.
A person with active T-B must take medicine
each day for six to nine months to halt progression of the disease.
This VOA Special English Development Report
was written by Jill Moss.
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