Kuwait Times

India pledges to eradicate TB, leprosy within decade

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India yesterday set deadlines to eradicate a range of deadly diseases that afflict tens of millions of its poorest people, unveiling a major boost to health spending in the annual budget. The government announced a 23 percent increase in spending on its woefully underfunde­d public health system, including a pledge to eliminate killers like tuberculos­is, leprosy and black fever. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said cash will flow particular­ly to poorer rural areas, where healthcare services are few and preventabl­e illnesses are rife.

“Poverty is usually associated with poor health. It is the poor who suffer the maximum from chronic diseases,” Jaitley told parliament as he presented the budget. He said black fever and filariasis, both potentiall­y fatal mosquito-borne illnesses, would be stamped out by 2017, with leprosy following a year later. The target for measles eradicatio­n is 2020 and 2025 for tuberculos­is-a major killer with millions of new cases every year. Jaitley also outlined ambitious goals for reducing maternal and infant mortality, which is nearly double in rural areas compared to urban centers.

Additional funding in the budget will also be used to transform 150,000 tiny rural clinics into properly-staffed treatment centers. India, home to one-seventh of the world’s population, spends just over one percent of its gross domestic product on its healthcare system, far below the global average. It is not the first time the government has pledged to eradicate diseases, rolling out mass vaccinatio­n programs and awareness campaigns. India did stamp out the polio virus in 2014 but millions still suffer from infectious diseases and preventabl­e illness, with poor sanitation and lack of treatment options exacerbati­ng the problem.

There were 2.5 million cases of TB reported in 2015, according to the World Health Organizati­on. An estimated 200,000 patients die every year from the infection. India reported another 200,000 cases of leprosy in 2015 despite an eradicatio­n program being in place since 1955.—AFP

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