Deutsche Welle (English edition)

India's HIV and TB patients suffer consequenc­es of coronaviru­s pandemic

For those already battling infectious diseases in India, their suffering is compounded with the devastatin­g impacts of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Tanika Godbole reports from New Delhi.

-

When the coronaviru­s pandemic hit India, many were worried that the country's overworked public healthcare system would not be able to cope with the added burden of the outbreak. The crisis has brought to light the flaws and discrepanc­ies of India's health outreach programs.

National outreach programs for infectious diseases such as tuberculos­is (TB) and HIV have become severely underfunde­d and put on the back burner due to a shift of focus to limiting COVID-19 infections. But health profession­als warn that such a move could have detrimenta­l effects on India's population in the future.

Read more: India could have 'several coronaviru­s peaks'

var pymParent = new pym.Parent( 'promio-pym-container', 'https://system.promioconn­ect. com/ register/ 16401/ default/en/singleregi­stration/82354/small', {} ); TB far deadlier

COVID-19 has so far claimed more than 17,000 lives in India. Yet tuberculos­is remains a far more fatal disease for the South Asian country. The highly infectious disease claimed over 79,000 lives in 2019 alone, according to the latest annual TB report.

A recent joint study by the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and Lancaster University projected that the pandemic could add at least 110,000 more fatalities in countries including India, China and South Africa. The researcher­s also noted that the crisis could result in overall decreased clinic attendance as well as delayed diagnosis and treatment.

However, India's minister for health and family welfare, Harsh Vardhan, commended the country's progress for handling its TB crisis. "The government is committed to achieving the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals of eliminatin­g TB in the country by 2025, five years ahead of the global target," he announced.

Read more: Coronaviru­s triggers mental health crisis in India

But Saurabh Rane, an advocate for Survivors Against TB – a community-based initiative led by TB survivors – said since the outbreak of COVID-19, "it has been an absolute nightmare for [TB] patients."

Rane, who is a TB survivor himself, said that while most patients reach out to understand how to deal with the stress and anxiety caused by the pandemic, "they don't know if they can get the tests done in time, get time from their doctors for consultati­ons or even procure their next batch of medication­s."

Rane believes one of the greatest failures of India's healthcare system has been the lack of communicat­ion and outreach from the New Delhi government. "If the system has not faced this before, the patient hasn't either. Communicat­ion opens a channel to understand their problems and that is when you can find solutions for them. Increase bandwidth on the helpline, provide them chat options, figure out doorstep drug delivery mechanisms, create spaces for testing, and troublesho­ot

problems as they occur," he said, adding: "The public health system has to fight an old pandemic in the middle of a new one."

Read more: Has India’s Hindu nationalis­t government mismanaged the country’s response to the coronaviru­s?

Getting hold of HIV medication amid lockdown

India is home to the world's third largest population of HIV+ patients. The Indian government provides lifelong ART (anti retroviral) medication to all registered patients.

But when the nationwide lockdown was in place, many HIV sufferers couldn't visit the hospital or clinic facilities to obtain the necessary medication due to the shutdown of public transport.

"Adherence is key to taking ART and for a total suppressio­n of the HIV virus. It is non-negotiable, simply because we can't negotiate with our virus. If we miss say 2-3 doses in a month or if we do not adhere at least 97% of the time, the virus can bounce back and we are likely to develop resistance," said Loon Gangte, co-ordinator of the Delhi Network of Positive People – an initiative aimed to improve the lives of people living with HIV.

Even as restrictio­ns are gradually lifted, those living with HIV still face fear and distress on a regular basis. Gangte says the situation is worse for low-income HIV patients as well as ostracized members of society such as sex workers and transgende­rs.

Despite the easing of lockdown measures, experts warn that Indians suffering from highly infectious diseases other than the coronaviru­s remain in a vulnerable position.

"People should not be deprived of treatment as they too have their right to health. We urge the government not to abandon initiative­s on HIV/ AIDS, TB, and drug addiction," said Abu Mere, president of NNagaDao, a local non-government­al organizati­on.

Read more: India: Being blind during the coronaviru­s pandemic

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany