Copyright 2003 British
Broadcasting Corporation
BBC Monitoring South Asia - Political
Supplied by BBC Worldwide Monitoring
March 25, 2003, Tuesday
LENGTH: 613 words
HEADLINE: Over 300,000 tuberculosis cases per year in Bangladesh - seminar
SOURCE: The Independent web site, Dhaka, in English 25 Mar 03
BODY:
Excerpt from of report by Bangladeshi newspaper The Independent web site on 25 March
Speakers at a seminar on "Tuberculosis in Bangladesh" said yesterday that more
than 300,000 new TB cases are reported per year in Bangladesh and of them 70,000 die.
The seminar was held at the auditorium of the National Institute of Diseases of the Chest
& Hospital (NIDCH) at Mohakhali. The Chest and Heart Association of Bangladesh (CHAB)
and BRAC expansion unknown , an NGO, jointly organized the seminar in connection with the
observance of World TB Day 2003.
The World TB Day 2003 was observed in Bangladesh as elsewhere around the
globe yesterday. The theme for World TB Day 2003 is "People with
TB" and the slogan is "DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course) cured me
- it will cure you too!" This highlights the need to involve people with TB as
advocates and active participants in TB control, said speakers at the seminar.
On an average three to four months of work time are lost as a result of TB; this results
in average loss of potential earnings of 20 to 30 per cent of annual household income. A
further loss of 15 years of income occurs to the families whose member dies of TB. About
75 per cent of TB infections and deaths occur in the 15 to 54 year age group, the most
economically productive age group in the population. The GDP per capita may reduce up to
one per cent every year because of TB.
The speakers said TB should be suspected when cough lasts for more than three weeks. They
said TB could be cured if all prescribed drugs were taken for six to eight months. TB
becomes drug resistant when treatment is not completed, cure is then very difficult.
The National TB Control Programme in Bangladesh aims to reduce the incidence of
tuberculosis. The objective of the programme is to detect at least 70 per cent of the
contagious TB cases and to cure at least 85 per cent of them. The DOTS Strategy is adopted
as the highest cost-effective to achieve these objectives.
Planned activities for 2003 will emphasize mobilizing TB patients and people who have been
cured of TB - as well as those in the health sector - to advocate for government action,
educate communities, and put a human face on TB to reduce social stigmas associated with
the disease.
The DOTS strategy is the WHO recommended policy package of five components to control TB:
commitment of the government, microscopy investigation, standardized treatment,
uninterrupted supply of all anti-TB drugs and other supplies, and registration and
reporting of TB patients to avoid defaulters and monitoring the programme performance.
The National TB Control Programme follows the DOTS strategy to improve poor or
uncoordinated TB services. Free services are offered by the National TB Control Programme
in all 460 upazilas subdistricts and four metropolitan cities-Dhaka, Chittagong, Khulna
and Rajshahi. The service is also available in 45 chest clinics throughout the country and
four TB Hospitals - Chittagong, Khulna, Rajshahi and Sylhet. Under the National TB Control
Programme 34 per cent of the estimated patients were detected in 2002. A total of 81,795
TB cases were reported under the programme in 2002 and 5,65,408 from 1993 to 2002. About
84 per cent of the patients were successfully treated in 2001.
The Commission on Macroeconomics and Health (CMH), established two years ago by the
director-general of WHO, calls for scaling up health interventions to tackle diseases
related to poverty, as HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. The UN targets are to halve the
mortality of TB and malaria and reduce new HIV infections by 25 per cent by 2010... |