Science and Development Network
News, views and information about science, technology and the developing world
Source: New England Journal of Medicine
17 March 2008 | EN | 中文
A lack of resources hinders TB control, say authors
WHO/TDR/Crump
India's "startling" rate of confirmed tuberculosis (TB) infection and the worst TB epidemic in Africa since the advent of antibiotics are highlighted in two articles in the New England Journal of Medicine.
In Africa, say Richard E. Chaisson and Neil A. Martinson, coexistence with HIV plays a large role, and TB detection relies on a sputum analysis technique that is particularly ill-suited to detection in HIV-infected patients.
As a result, many people remain ill and contagious for long periods before the disease is detected and thousands die without receiving a diagnosis. The average rate of successful treatment is also below the WHO target.
The declaration of a "TB emergency" by African health ministers in 2005 offered a glimmer of hope, but this requires enormous commitment, particularly regarding the development of new biomedical tools.
While research into new treatments is underway, African healthcare systems could adopt new strategies, including better use of existing culture techniques and WHO-standard treatment programmes, the authors add.
In India, says Vikram Paralkar in the second article, treatment of latent tuberculosis with nine months of single-drug therapy — the norm in the United States — is a concept found only in textbooks: were it implemented, nearly a tenth of the population would require treatment.
Progress has been made, and the WHO has reported that India's TB control programme had expanded to cover the whole country. But corruption complicated the situation, with officials recording fictional patients in order to meet government quotas.
"We must remember that statistics are only as good as the village-level data on which they are based," he says. "Many people continue to slip through the net and into jostling crowds, with at most a thin handkerchief to stifle their incessant cough."
Beijing's air pollution monitoring will be watched during the Olympics and beyond
An epidemic of kidney disease among farming communities is puzzling Sri Lankan researchers
Add your comment
All comments are subject to approval and we reserve the right to edit comments containing inappropriate/unsuitable language. SciDev.Net holds copyright for all material posted on the website. Please see terms of use for further details.
You need to be signed in to post a comment or to email a consenting comment author. Please sign in or sign up.