Controlling the drug-resistant tuberculosis epidemic in India: challenges and implications

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Husain, Aliabbas A.;Kupz, Andreas;Kashyap, Rajpal S.
Abstract

India has a higher tuberculosis (TB) burden than any other country, accounting for an estimated one-fourth of the global burden. Drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) presents a major public health problem in India. Patients with DR-TB often require profound changes in their drug regimens, which are invariably linked to poor treatment adherence and sub-optimal treatment outcomes compared to drug-sensitive TB. The challenge of addressing DR-TB is critical for India, as India contributes over 27% of global DR-TB cases. In recent decades, India has been proactive in its battle against TB, even implementing a revised National Strategic Plan to eliminate TB by 2025. However, to achieve this ambitious goal, the country will need to take a multifaceted approach with respect to its management of DR-TB. Despite concerted efforts made by the National TB Elimination Program, India faces substantial challenges with regard to DR-TB care, especially in peripheral and resource-limited endemic zones. This article describes some of the major challenges associated with mitigating the growing DR-TB epidemic in India and their implications.

Journal

Epidemiology and Health

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Volume

43

ISBN/ISSN

2092-7193

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Pages Count

9

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Publisher

Korean Society of Epidemiology

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DOI

10.4178/epih.e2021022