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Contribution of medical colleges to tuberculosis control in India under the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP): lessons learnt & challenges ahead.

Authors :
Sharma SK
Mohan A
Chauhan LS
Narain JP
Kumar P
Behera D
Sachdeva KS
Kumar A
Agarwal P
Awadh NT
Bansal A
Baruah S
Baruwa P
Balasangameshwara VH
Balasubramanian R
Bhardwaj AK
Bhargav S
Chadha S
Chaddha VK
Chhatwal M
Da Costa AL
Dash DP
Dep J
Dhingra S
Dhooria Harmeet S
Frieden TR
Garg A
Granich R
Gulati V
Gupta D
Gupta D
Gupta KB
Gupta KN
Jaikishan
Janmeja AK
Jawahar MS
Jethani SL
Jindal SK
John KR
Kalra OP
Kalra VP
Kannan AT
Kayshap S
Keshav Chander G
Khushwa SS
Kushwaha RS
Kumar V
Laskar B
Leela Itty Amma KR
Leuva AT
Maitra Malay K
Mesquita AM
Mathew T
Mundade Y
Munje R
Nagpal S
Nagaraja C
Nair S
Narayanan OR
Paramasivan CN
Parmar M
Prasad R
Phukan AC
Prasanna R
Purty A
Ramachandran R
Ramachandran R
Ravindran C
Reddy Raveendra HR
Sahu S
Santosha
Sarin R
Sarkar S
Sarma KC
Saxena P
Sehgal S
Sharath N
Sharma G
Sharma N
Shridhar PK
Shukla RS
Singh O
Singh NT
Singh V
Singla R
Sinha N
Sinha P
Sinha S
Solanki R
Sreenivas A
Srinath S
Subhakar K
Suri JC
Talukdar P
Tonsing J
Tripathy SP
Vaidyanathan P
Vashist RP
Venu K
Source :
The Indian journal of medical research [Indian J Med Res] 2013 Feb; Vol. 137 (2), pp. 283-94.
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Medical college faculty, who are academicians are seldom directly involved in the implementation of national public health programmes. More than a decade ago for the first time in the global history of tuberculosis (TB) control, medical colleges of India were involved in the Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP) of Government of India (GOI). This report documents the unique and extraordinary course of events that led to the involvement of medical colleges in the RNTCP of GOI. It also reports the contributions made by the medical colleges to TB control in India. For more than a decade, medical colleges have been providing diagnostic services (Designated Microscopy Centres), treatment [Directly Observed Treatment (DOT) Centres] referral for treatment, recording and reporting data, carrying out advocacy for RNTCP and conducting operational research relevant to RNTCP. Medical colleges are contributing to diagnosis and treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-TB co-infection and development of laboratory infrastructure for early diagnosis of multidrug-resistant and/or extensively drug-resistant TB (M/XDR-TB) and DOTS-Plus sites for treatment of MDR-TB cases. Overall, at a national level, medical colleges have contributed to 25 per cent of TB suspects referred for diagnosis; 23 per cent of 'new smear-positives' diagnosed; 7 per cent of DOT provision within medical college; and 86 per cent treatment success rate among new smear-positive patients. As the Programme widens its scope, future challenges include sustenance of this contribution and facilitating universal access to quality TB care; greater involvement in operational research relevant to the Programme needs; and better co-ordination mechanisms between district, state, zonal and national level to encourage their involvement.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0971-5916
Volume :
137
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Indian journal of medical research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23563371