The Hindu (Tiruchirapalli)

For India’s homeless women, TB care is shaped by gender norms and economic precarity

Today is Internatio­nal Women’s Day, and many homeless women in India are facing the most terrible predicamen­t — managing the economic and clinical challenges of TB while they struggle to get by without a roof over their heads or anyone they could call on

- Saumya Kalia

here are two explanatio­ns for how Reshma (name changed) died. In one, she is a disease statistic. A 30yearold new mother, living on the pavement in Jaipur, died from contractin­g tuberculos­is. The bacteria settled in her lungs, immunity weakened, medicines failed.

The other story is not as linear or logical. Reshma’s family cast her out when the diagnosis came belatedly. She fought disease and destitutio­n on the streets, between the stifling summer sun and crisp cold at night. The absence of proper treatment, and minimal food, however, allowed the TB pathogen to evade her immune defence.

Reshma’s story — as a woman and as a person without shelter — isn’t singular. A new study, supported by the Dr. Amit Sengupta Fellowship on Health Rights (ASFHR), captures the gendered lens of a clinical disease and challenges rigid mortality numbers. In addition to economic precarity, patriarcha­l norms decided if Reshma’s cough was accurately diagnosed, when she reached a health facility, how often she followed the sixmonth drug regimen, and if she would go on to develop drugresist­ant TB infections. Experts suggest that stigma and isolation further wrinkle women’s access to care in a system that becomes hostile to people lacking institutio­nal agency or autonomy.

TThe data gap

The recent survey illustrate­d how this cycle of inequity plays out, documentin­g 17 cases of homeless people living with TB in Jaipur. Overcrowde­d and unsanitary conditions accelerate­d TB transmissi­on; malnutriti­on and weak immunity further increaseed their risk of contractin­g TB. HIV coinfectio­n, alcoholism, smoking and tobacco chewing also worsened their TB infection. Lack of shelter further complicate­d access to healthcare — homeless people were less likely to receive a timely diagnosis and treatment, and in turn, more likely to develop drugresist­ant strains of the disease.

The study found a pronounced impact on women like Reshma, who feel unseen by both the community and the medical system. India in 2022 accounted for the world’s highest cases of tuberculos­is, per this year’s World Health Organisati­on Global Tuberculos­is Report. Local estimates show the overall occurrence of TB among the homeless population was around 85 cases per 1,000 population Within them, the prevalence of TB among homeless females was 1.5 times higher than homeless males.

Anupama Srinivasan, Assistant

Director of REACH, explains that women’s experience­s often play out in a blind spot. “We do not as yet know enough about the specific experience­s of homeless persons with TB… Homeless women are one step beyond that.”

In larger national surveys, more men

Bureaucrac­tic hurdles make it difficult for woment to access TB care.

are notified than women, driving the perception that TB is a ‘male disease’, says Ms. Srinivasan. However, “it’s not just the numbers we need to focus on; it’s the experience of healthcare itself.”TB is a disease of inequity, she explains, where women’s healthseek­ing behaviours and adherence to treatments depend vastly on the social support available to them.

Access to nutrition, finance

India’s Nikshay Poshan Yojana (NKY), integrated in 2018 in the national TB programme, promises a monthly cash incentive of ₹500 through direct benefit transfers (DBT). India launched another nutritiona­l support programme in 2022, Nikshay Mitra, which offers food baskets worth ₹700. Under this, patients can register on a webbased portal to access informatio­n or connect with doctors.Experts, however, suggest homeless women struggle to navigate this map of TB care. In this map, an insistence on ID cards and bank accounts creates barricades.

Most women without shelter lack documents to show identity proofs, do not have bank accounts and are disconnect­ed from digitised services, says Dr. Sugata Mukhopadhy­ay of NGO Humana India. Since a majority of homeless people migrate from neighbouri­ng states, “illiteracy rate is very high, and more so for women” who end up working as contractua­l labour living in shacks. Because they lack permanent accommodat­ion, and by extension, identity proof, they struggle to access nutrition services, he suggests.

When and if women have individual accounts, patriarcha­l norms compromise the autonomy women exercise over their earnings, studies show. In Delhi, NGO Humana observed that behavioura­l habits associated with poverty, like alcoholism, meant husbands used the woman’s money for alcohol or drugs.

In other cases, the money given to the women was used for buying food for the entire family, “not giving special focus to supplement­ing the nutritiona­l requiremen­ts of the women”, says Mr. Mukhopadhy­ay. Food is critical in TB care: at least 55% of new TB cases annually in India are due to poor nutrition, Health Ministry sources said in 2019. Conversely, regular nutritiona­l support, to the individual and the family, could lead to a 3948% reduction in TB disease, according to the landmark RATIONS trial published in The Lancet recently

Reaching the point of diagnosis, care

Diagnosing TB is challengin­g for multiple reasons, one being its vague early symptoms. Recurring cough, fever or a low appetite — early signs of the disease — are often quotidian realities for people living in poverty or without access to good nutrition. And for a woman living on the street, who has no family, the ‘odds are very high’ that she may not reach the point of diagnosis, experts suggest. Moreover, from the day one starts coughing to the day TB is confirmed, the journey is longer, delayed and more arduous for women in comparison to men, a 2018 report showed. A 2023 study in PLOS One showed onethird of TB cases in India go undiagnose­d each year, a gap that is “more pronounced among female patients”. Women may also delay seeking help due to a lack of awareness and stigma associated with the disease.

A TB diagnosis is also prolonged, rarely promising an instant answer. Suspected patients are required to give a sputum sample (a mixture of saliva and mucus from the respirator­y tract) and/or undertake an Xray. Without counsellin­g and privacy, women may feel ‘inhibited’ and ‘shy’ in bringing out sputum, thus affecting the quality of the sample and results. Experts have flagged the efficacy of sputum microscopy in detecting extrapulmo­nary TB (an infection which affects organs other than the lungs), which is more common among women. The prolonged process and repeated visits may also seem unnecessar­y to women who may interpret their cough as a consequenc­e of, say, living on Jaipur’s polluted roads.

Since 2017, the National Tuberculos­is Programme has undertaken active case finding (ACF) outside the healthcare settings among highrisk population­s. However, the first report on the strength of active case finding revealed the quality of this process was “suboptimal nationally”: at the national level, 9.3% of the population were screened, just 1% of the screened were tested and 3.7% of the tested were diagnosed.

The process becomes a punishment, going back more than once for diagnosis, and multiple times for medicines during the sixmonthlo­ng regimen. Until COVID19, most centres gave medicines for a week, a way to get people to come back and monitor adherence and side effects. Women already face mobility and financial challenges; for someone living on the streets, moving around a city, the odds they can always return to the same dispensary to collect medicines are low. The Humana survey also found treatment literacy and counsellin­g quality for homeless women is lower in comparison to other groups — they were likely to drop off medication­s once they started feeling better. Shortage of antiTB drugs would further deter homeless women from returning.

Building ecosystems of care

The study recommends recognisin­g homelessne­ss and gender in the TB

Mukht Bharat programme, legally weaving their rights to health care under Union and State government schemes. If a TB patient requires X amount of effort in terms of counsellin­g and tracking, a homeless TB patient would require 2X, and a homeless woman TB patient would require 4X. A strange mathematic­al equation, but it boils down to this: “Are we willing to invest that time and energy?”

(This story is part of the Dr. Amit Sengupta Fellowship on Health Rights. The survey was conducted by Hemant Mohanpuriy­a in 2021, during the COVID-19 lockdown.The author may be reached at saumya.k@thehindu.co.in)

In addition to economic precarity, patriarcha­l norms decide if symptoms are accurately diagnosed and how often the patient follows the sixmonth drug regimen

India in 2022 accounted for the world’s highest cases of tuberculos­is. The overall occurrence of TB among the homeless was around 85 per 1,000 population Within them, prevalence among homeless females was 1.5 times higher than homeless males

Money given to women is often used to buy food for the entire family. Food is critical in TB care: at least 55% of new TB cases annually in India are due to poor nutrition

Homelessne­ss and social stigma contribute­d to her isolation, mental struggle and marginalis­ation

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