
Bringing dramatic drop in TB deaths, how TN set an example for rest of India with one-of-a-kind model
An analysis by the agencies implementing the Tamil Nadu Kasanoi Erappila Thittam (TN-KET, which means TB death-free project) has shown that within six months of the launch of the initiative in April 2022, overall TB-related deaths have come down by nearly 10 percent while early TB fatalities reduced by nearly 20 percent.
Chennai: A first-of-its-kind statewide differentiated tuberculosis (TB) care initiative in Tamil Nadu has significantly brought down TB deaths in the state, prompting researchers to pitch it as a model that can be replicated across the country.
These results from TN-KET hold significance for India which continues to report the highest burden of TB and TB-related mortalities globally despite making significant strides in curbing the burden of the bacterial disease over the last several years.
India is considered a TB endemic country, a highly infectious disease caused by a bacteria called Bacillus Mycobacterium Tuberculosis, which is spread when people who are sick with TB expel the pathogen into the air, mostly by coughing.
Spearheaded by the Tamil Nadu State TB Cell and Indian Council of Medical Research-National Institute of Epidemiology (ICMR-NIE), the TN-KET initiative involves triaging (preliminary assessment) adults with TB at diagnosis, and those identified as severely ill based on specified indicators are prioritised immediately for referral, comprehensive assessment, and inpatient care.
'The key aim is to gauge or predict the patients who are likely to die due to the infectious disease while first identifying the disease in them and immediately offer them hospitalised care to treat the severe symptoms they have,' said ICMR-NIE director Dr Manoj Murhekar.
The initiative, also supported by the World Health Organisation (WHO) India and the ICMR National Institute for Research in TB (ICMR-NIRT), has been implemented in all 38 districts of Tamil Nadu, except for Chennai.
'This initiative has shown that it is possible to bring down TB-related deaths remarkably by following some scientifically designed tools and methods. Severe illness can be quickly identified through triaging and they can be promptly admitted after diagnosis,' Dr Hemant Deepak Shewade, a senior medical scientist with ICMR-NIE who is associated with the initiative, told ThePrint.
While the impact of the project in the first year has been analysed, the analysis of the second year (2023-24) is still underway but the early indications from routine monitoring of TN-KET suggest that it is even better than the previous results, Shewade said.
'We feel that scaling the model across India will be beneficial in bringing down the number of people dying every year due to the disease,' he added.
The senior scientist, however, cautioned that such an initiative could only bring down TB-related deaths by up to 30 percent, and measures like detecting all TB incidents, early detection, comorbidity management, universal health coverage, among others, were crucial to further reduce TB deaths in the country.
Dr Asha Frederick, Tamil Nadu's State TB Officer, said that district TB officers and Nodal physicians have played a key role in the implementation of the initiative. 'We recommend that these triage variables are captured elsewhere including other Indian states and high TB burden countries to guide patient management,' Dr Frederick said.
On the future plans for the TN-KET, the state has started identifying other severe comorbidities like uncontrolled Diabetes (requiring insulin) among people with TB. 'If this goes well, we plan to cover other severe comorbidities like severe addiction to alcohol and tobacco,' Frederick added.
According to the World TB report 2024 by the WHO, there were an estimated 28 lakh incident people with TB in 2023, 26 percent of global TB burden. Also, the country had an estimated 3.1 lakh TB deaths that year which was 29 percent of all TB mortalities globally.
Tamil Nadu is among the states with high TB burden in the country.
Also Read: Lancet report highlights gaps in immunisation—no routine vaccine for 14.4 lakh Indian kids in 2023
How the strategy works
As part of the project, health workers triage every new TB-diagnosed adult (all above 15 years) for very severe undernutrition, respiratory distress or poor physical condition on five variables—body mass index (BMI), pedal oedema (swelling of feet and ankles), respiratory rate, oxygen saturation, and ability to stand without support.
This is carried out as a health system initiative in routine operational settings by existing health workforce.
Whether or not a patient is severely ill is confirmed by entering the details into a software application TB SeWA (Severe TB Web Application). All those identified as severely ill are then prioritised for in-patient care by nodal physicians in nodal inpatient care facilities of the districts, using TN-KET case record form and in-patient care guides specifically developed for such patients.
A study published on the early implementation of the project and its feasibility underlined that 80-90 percent of severely ill patients (as per triage tool) are getting detected and admitted within one day of diagnosis.
The admission of severely ill patients (triage-positive) has improved over the years: 67 percent in 2022, 86 percent in 2023 and 91 percent in 2024. The median admission duration was five days in 2022 and this has improved to seven days in 2023 and 2024.
Over the years, the focus has been to ensure quality comprehensive assessment and inpatient care during the admission of the severely ill patients with focus on therapeutic nutrition for very severely undernourished patients as half of those eligible for admission have very severe undernutrition.
Between April 2022 and June 2023, as per details shared by ICMR-NIE scientists, 66,765 of 72,404 notified adults were triaged, and 7,950 were triage-positive (identified as severely sick due to TB).
Among these, 5,870 (or 74 percent) patents were referred and admitted. The analysis later showed 21 percent decline in early TB death rate and 11 percent reduction in overall TB death rate during treatment.
By improving the admission among triage-positive patients, there is scope to further reduce TB death rate, the researchers noted, adding that once the goal of 30 percent mortality rate reduction among notified TB patients using this strategy is achieved, they will consider adding follow up triaging for all patients at two months for further reduction in mortality rate.
As per the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), India has to eliminate TB by 2030.
(Edited by Ajeet Tiwari)
Also Read: COVID-19 vaccines linked to cardiac-related deaths? Siddaramaiah, Biocon founder Shaw spar on X
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
7 hours ago
- Indian Express
Data from India's ageing study suggests one-fifth of those aged 45 and above had diabetes in 2019
About a fifth of those aged 45 and above were living with diabetes in 2019, with two in every five possibly unaware of their condition, according to data from a study among India's ageing adults. Researchers, including those from the International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, and US, also found that 46 per cent of those aware of their diabetes regained a control over blood sugar levels, while around 60 per cent were able to control their blood pressure the same year. Six per cent were taking a lipid-lowering medication to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease, the team said. The 'Longitudinal Aging Study in India' (LASI), which surveyed about 60,000 adults aged 45 and above during 2017-2019 (Wave 1), found prevalence of the metabolic condition was similar among men and women (nearly 20 per cent) and that in urban areas was twice, compared to prevalence in rural ones. Further, states that were economically more developed tended to have a greater prevalence of diabetes, with about a third or more having diabetes in the states where prevalence was highest, the researchers said. 'Our study provides updated, nationally representative, and state-representative estimates of diabetes prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control using glycaeted haemoglobin (HbA1c) concentrations among middle-aged and older adults in India,' they wrote. The team 'found that approximately one in five people aged 45 years and older had diabetes (50.4 million individuals), that variation across states was wide, and that urban diabetes prevalence was twice as high as rural prevalence.' The authors added that compared to results from previous national surveys, such as the Indian Council of Medical Research-India Diabetes (ICMR-INDIAB) study that spanned 2008-2020, findings from the LASI suggest a slightly higher achievement of glycaemic and blood pressure targets, but a lower achievement of lipid-lowering medication targets, among the population. The authors' findings support the notion that 'India continues to be at a stage in the nutrition transition characterised by greatest diabetes prevalence among higher socioeconomic groups.' Further, the results showing a greater prevalence of diabetes among the older age groups are important as the country's population ages rapidly, the team said. The results suggest that 'in the coming years, the total number of middle-aged and older adults with diabetes will increase even if the rise in age-specific diabetes prevalence can be halted.'


The Hindu
7 hours ago
- The Hindu
How migration to urban areas is expanding waistlines in India
Migration is reshaping Indian bodies—not just metaphorically, but physically, and measurably so. As millions move from villages to cities, the contours of daily life shift: new jobs, new routines, new stresses and new diets. And gradually, their bodies change too. In a recent analysis of over 31,000 adults aged 45 and above, researchers Bittu Mandal and Kalandi Charan Prasad at the Indian Institute of Technology, Indore report a strong link between rural-to-urban migration and obesity. The longer someone lives in a city, the more likely they are to carry excess weight—especially around the waist, the fat most tied to chronic disease. Migration, they suggest, is not just demographic—it's metabolic. What the research looked at To trace how cities imprint themselves on the body, the researchers turned to one of the largest ageing surveys in the world—the Longitudinal Aging Study in India (LASI). Conducted across every State and Union Territory in 2017–18, it captured the lives of over 70,000 adults aged 45 and above. From this national tapestry, the team pulled a focused thread—31,595 people whose past and present addresses told a story of movement. They zeroed in on those who had left villages for cities, classifying these rural-to-urban migrants by how long they'd lived in their new urban homes: under five years, five to ten, or more than a decade. Then came the crucial question: Had their bodies changed with time in the city? The researchers examined both body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference—because belly fat, more than weight alone, is often the clearer signal of looming chronic disease. Using multiple statistical models, they asked whether simply spending more time in a city made people more likely to become obese. What they found The analysis revealed a clear trend. The longer someone lives in a city, the higher their odds of obesity. Even within five years of migrating, rural-to-urban migrants were nearly twice as likely to be obese as rural non-migrants, with the risk rising further after 6–10 years and again after a decade. 'We did not observe a clear point where the risk stabilises,' said Bittu Mandal, one of the study's authors. This pattern held for both general (measured by BMI) and abdominal obesity. Among rural non-migrants, just 2.6% were obese, compared to 13.1% for long-term urban dwellers and migrants. This aligns with the Indian Migration Study, which found increased body fat in migrants within a decade, characterised by higher blood pressures, lipids, and fasting blood glucose—patterns consistent across gender, as noted in an earlier work by Varadharajan et al. and Ebrahim et al. The ICMR-INDIAB study further showed that migrants had the highest rates of abdominal obesity and diabetes, surpassing even long-term city dwellers. The data also highlighted group-level differences. Obesity was especially common among women, wealthier or more educated individuals, and adults aged 45–59, who often adopt sedentary urban jobs and calorie-dense diets more readily than older migrants. 'Many migrants shift from labour-intensive rural work to desk jobs,' Mr. Mandal explained. 'Cities also offer easy access to processed foods, driving abdominal weight gain.' This is not just a matter of availability but also time. 'Time pressures associated with urban employment lead to increased demand for time-saving in food preparation and consumption,' said Prabhu Pingali, director of the Tata-Cornell Institute for Agriculture and Nutrition. 'Pre-packaged and processed foods are everywhere, often replacing fresh meals in urban diets, especially for the poor.' Anaka Aiyar, a developmental economist at University of Vermont cautions that even non-migrants aren't spared as urban influence spreads. 'As market access improves in rural and peri-urban areas, processed foods become increasingly available. This shifts diets toward obesogenic patterns, especially for lower-middle-income women in sedentary jobs.' Filling the gaps While the study is statistically robust, its cross-sectional design leaves one key question open: does city life cause weight gain—or are heavier people more likely to migrate? Other research in the area bridges this gap. Sibling-pair studies in India—where migrants are compared to their rural siblings—show a consistent pattern. The migrant sibling is typically heavier, less active, and eats less nutritiously. Both higher calorie intake and lower energy expenditure contribute equally to their greater body fat—driven mainly by fatty diets, sedentary habits, and limited physical activity. Oyebode and colleagues looked at pooled data of 40,000 individuals from China, Ghana, India, Mexico, Russia, and South Africa and found that occupational activity among migrants was lower and leisure activity higher. Together, these studies build a robust case—migration alters work, diet, and daily life in ways that foster weight gain. Policy implications As more Indians migrate to cities the health risks of that shift are becoming clearer. Yet internal migrants, particularly women and middle-aged adults, often fall through the cracks of public health programmes. 'They are often overlooked,' said Mr. Mandal. 'They face barriers such as lack of documentation, limited awareness, and care disruptions.' He suggests that national programmes - Ayushman Bharat and NPCDCS (National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases and Stroke)- expand migrant outreach, offer portable benefits, and prioritise targeted screenings. But the challenge may run deeper than healthcare access. 'Food environments are changing rapidly, while nutrition policies lag behind,' said Prof. Aiyar. 'This disconnect risks leaving low-income and female migrants especially vulnerable.' Prof. Pingali argues that India's grain-heavy food policy has long limited access to fresh produce. 'Processed foods become default substitutes, especially for the urban poor,' he said. 'Combined with sedentary lifestyles and sugary drinks, this fuels adverse health outcomes.' He calls for a policy shift toward year-round access to fruits, vegetables, and dairy. From a different angle, economist Arup Mitra, professor at South Asian University and the former director-general of the National Institute of Labour Economics Research and Development, notes that many low-income migrants face basic nutritional hardships in cities. 'Access to healthy livelihoods—whether via sanitation or food—is already limited,' he said. 'And rising living costs only make things worse.' As India's cities swell and its migrants age, the country must reshape its health response—before citizens start bearing the irreversible burden of neglect.


Hindustan Times
9 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Doctor warns Indians in 20s and 30s about prediabetes: 5 signs and 1 simple blood test you should not ignore
Several celebrities have publicly discussed their experiences with pre-diabetes. From Hollywood actor Viola Davis, who was diagnosed with pre-diabetes and has become an advocate for diabetes education and awareness, to veteran actor Tom Hanks. The Oscar-winning actor was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, and had revealed that his blood sugar levels were elevated in his 30s, indicating pre-diabetes. Also read | Prediabetes can damage your health; know all the complications, prevention tips from experts Study shows that the ability to chew properly helps improve blood sugar levels in Type 2 diabetes patients. (Pexels) Pre-diabetes in younger individuals These celebrities' stories highlight the importance of awareness, education, and lifestyle changes in managing pre-diabetes. In an interview with HT Lifestyle, Dr Suchismitha Rajamanya, lead consultant and HOD, internal medicine, Aster Whitefield Hospital, Bengaluru, highlighted how pre-diabetes in younger Indians is an increasingly concerning issue. She said, 'Pre-diabetes, a state where blood sugar levels are higher than normal without yet being classified as type 2 diabetes, is an increasingly common diagnosis in younger people in their 20s and 30s in India. As we are seeing, pre-diabetes is on the rise due to sedentary lifestyles, irregular eating habits, stress levels and poor sleep patterns — all behaviours young people subscribe to in urban areas today.' She added, 'Prediabetes isn't a diagnosis it's a warning signal. If you make the right changes keep a healthy diet, exercise regularly, manage stress, and get the HbA1c test every year you may be able to completely reverse the risk factor. The trick is early detection. With increasing rates of type 2 diabetes in India, particularly in younger adults, pre-diabetes screening is not an option anymore; it is a necessity.' What is pre-diabetes and why is it dangerous? According to Dr Rajamanya, pre-diabetes is difficult to detect due to the absence of recognised symptoms. 'You may feel perfectly well and full of energy, but your body's management of blood levels may already be affecting your health. If no action is taken, a typical person will develop diabetes within 5-10 years and in some circumstances, less. The recent Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR)-INDIAB study found that 15.3 percent of Indians have pre-diabetes many of which are unaware. Most concerning is that this is increasingly affecting the younger generation.' Why you should care about the HbA1c test Dr Rajamanya said an HbA1c (glycated hemoglobin) test is a very simple blood test. 'It provides you with an alternative way of computing your average blood sugars from the last 2 to 3 months. Although a fasting sugar test would have only assessed your blood sugar at that moment, an HbA1c gives you a better snapshot of your blood sugars over a lengthier period of time. It is a great way to investigate your blood sugar levels before you enter the pre-diabetic stage when you might have the option to make lifestyle changes that could potentially reverse your diagnosis completely,' she explained. Per the American Diabetes Association, Dr Rajamanya shared HbA1c results are used to determine: ⦿ Under 5.7 percent - normal ⦿ 5.7 percent to 6.4 percent - pre-diabetes ⦿ 6.5 percent and over - diabetes 'If you are a younger person having a family history of diabetes, or high BMI, or PCOS for women, or any metabolic disease history or problems, it is good practice to have an annual HbA1c test as a preventative measure,' she added. Why are young Indians at risk? According to Dr Rajamanya, these factors play a role: 1. Carbohydrate-heavy diet + long sitting breaks: Most of the Indian diet of refined carbohydrates and sugars can result in some younger adults who have long desk hours with hardly any movement. 2. Stress metabolic effects + sleep deprivation: Chronic stress and irregular sleep have metabolic effects, causing hormonal imbalance in the body, which can negatively impact insulin sensitivity. 3. Failure to have health appointments: Many individuals under the age of 35 are not routinely screened unless symptoms appear- and by that time the damage potentially has commenced. Signs you should not ignore While there are no definitive symptoms of pre-diabetes, as per Dr Rajamanya, common signs include the following, and it is advisable to visit your physician and get tested for these signs: ⦿ Unexplained fatigue ⦿ Excessively thirsty or urinating excessively ⦿ Unexplained changes in weight ⦿ Dark patches of skin on the neck or armpits- acanthosis nigricans ⦿ Recurrent infections or wounds that take longer to heal Note to readers: This article is for informational purposes only and not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always seek the advice of your doctor with any questions about a medical condition.