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WHO hails Indian study on nutrition's role in TB as global guideline
WHO hails Indian study on nutrition's role in TB as global guideline

United News of India

time4 days ago

  • Health
  • United News of India

WHO hails Indian study on nutrition's role in TB as global guideline

New Delhi, Aug 6 (UNI) A study conducted by India that demonstrated the positive impact of nutrition on tuberculosis (TB) outcomes has drawn the attention of the World Health Organisation (WHO) which has described it 'as a global guidance on combating the world's most infectious disease.' Led by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), the study — conducted in Jharkhand — provided the first evidence that offering additional nutrition helps prevent TB cases and reduces mortality in India. 'The findings from India's RATIONS study on the impact of nutrition on TB outcomes and incidence have contributed to global guidance,' the WHO said during a three-day virtual workshop. The study, 'Nutritional support for adult patients with microbiologically confirmed pulmonary tuberculosis: outcomes in a programmatic cohort nested within the RATIONS trial in Jharkhand, India' is published in The Lancet Global Health in 2023. The researchers of the study had provided nutritional support to a cohort with a high prevalence of severe undernutrition in the State. The results were encouraging. 'Weight gain, particularly in the first 2 months, was associated with a substantially decreased hazard of tuberculosis mortality. Nutritional support needs to be an integral component of patient-centred care to improve treatment outcomes in such settings,' said the study. Asserting the member nations to share such innovative practices, the WHO has urged the South-East Asia Region — which accounts for the highest share of TB cases and deaths globally — to also urgently scale up research and innovation to meet End TB goals. 'In our region alone, nearly 5 million people developed TB and close to 600,000 died from the disease in 2023,' said Dr. Catharina Boehme, Officer-in-Charge, WHO South-East Asia Region in a statement here. She further added, 'Achieving the ambitious targets of the WHO End TB Strategy requires collaboration to accelerate research and innovation. This includes adopting and using new tools, technologies, and drugs. Ensuring timely and equitable access to these innovations is critical to achieving impact at scale, leaving no one behind.' The WHO noted that the South-East Asia Region has made notable progress, including a rise in TB case notifications in 2023 — a sign of recovery following COVID-19-related setbacks, however, progress remains insufficient to meet End TB Strategy targets. Following the pandemic, noted the WHO, as per the statement, TB has re-emerged as the world's leading cause of death from a single infectious agent. The disease disproportionately affects the poorest and most vulnerable, deepening existing inequalities. To counter this, 'countries in the region are increasingly leveraging new approaches such as artificial intelligence for case detection, computer-aided diagnostics, digital adherence tools, and direct benefit transfers for patients to streamline social support,' the WHO said. 'Our progress is uneven. Research and innovation capacity varies across the region, and the results of these efforts are often siloed and inaccessible for collaborative use. The rise in drug-resistant TB remains very concerning,' said Boehme. UNI AJ SSP

In fight against TB, poor nutrition a silent killer
In fight against TB, poor nutrition a silent killer

Hindustan Times

time14-05-2025

  • Health
  • Hindustan Times

In fight against TB, poor nutrition a silent killer

MUMBAI: A 32-year-old woman from a Worli slum is battling tuberculosis (TB) for the second time. A few months ago, she was diagnosed with drug-resistant TB—a more severe and harder-to-treat version of the disease. The woman lacks a crucial component in her treatment regimen – one no doctor can provide. The truth is, adequate nutrition alone would greatly raise her chances of recovery. Studies have shown that malnutrition fuels deaths and drug resistance in TB patients, undermining efforts to treat patients with all forms of the disease. On the other hand, a nutrient-rich diet significantly enhances positive outcomes. Part of the reason the woman is malnourished is that, for the last four months, she has not received the ₹1,000 monthly nutritional support under the government's Nikshay Poshan Yojana. The sum, recently doubled, is meant to help TB patients afford the bare essentials of a recovery-friendly diet. 'My monthly food expenses are around ₹2,000. So I skip the ₹700 protein powder prescribed by my doctor,' she told HT. A grim reality Vatsala was one of 2,800 people diagnosed with drug-resistant TB in Mumbai in 2024. That year, Mumbai recorded 60,051 TB cases—averaging 164 new cases diagnosed each day. In Maharashtra, TB detection rose marginally, by 2% in 2024 – 2,28,877 cases were reported, or 627 cases a day. In 2024, Mumbai alone witnessed 2,264 TB-related deaths—averaging over six deaths a day. Parel recorded the highest toll – 377 deaths, according to data obtained through the Right to Information Act, 2005. Nutritional support Health activists say the government should consider food a medical necessity for TB patients. Ganesh Acharya, a health activist working with TB patients in Mumbai, said, 'The ₹1,000 support should be raised to at least ₹2,500 if we want patients to recover. Nutrition is not a luxury—it is the core of TB treatment.' His concerns are reflected in the findings of the RATIONS trial—a landmark study (conducted between 2019 and 20-22, and published in The Lancet in 2023) in tribal Jharkhand, where TB-affected families were provided macronutrient-rich food baskets (1,200 kcal for patients and 750 kcal for household contacts). The trial showed significantly improved treatment outcomes and a reduction in TB incidence among contacts (family members). Based on this, a modelling study published in The Lancet Global Health (March 2025) estimated that providing food and supplements to just 50% of India's TB-affected households could prevent 361,200 deaths and 880,700 new TB cases between 2023 and 2035. Dr Finn McQuaid, one of the RATIONS researchers, told Hindustan Times, 'My understanding is that ( ₹1,000) is a big step in the right direction but it's not quite there yet. Another issue is that the composition of food baskets is important (they must contain sufficient proteins and micronutrients), which cash support alone may not address.' Dr Pranay Sinha, assistant professor at the Boston University School of Medicine, said implementation, not just policy design, is the bigger challenge. 'Lack of access to banking and other logistical delays prevent persons with TB from receiving the money at the most critical juncture of their treatment. We need some operational innovations to ensure that PWTB get the money as soon as possible post-diagnosis.' Role of Body Mass Index BMI is a key clinical indicator in TB outcomes—lower BMI increases mortality risk. However, McQuaid cautions against targeting support based on BMI. The RATIONS trial showed benefits even in patients with normal BMI, he underscores. On the flipside, Dr Pranay Sinha points out, even TB patients with normal BMI may suffer micronutrient deficiencies, noting studies linking Vitamin A deficiency to a ten-fold TB risk and citing 25% mortality in patients with BMI below 14 in Tamil Nadu, where he advocates early inpatient nutritional care. Sponsor a patient Experts feel it is not wise to lean too heavily on government schemes for nutritional support, an issue the Ni-kshay Mitra scheme hopes to address. A government scheme, it aims to enhance community involvement in the fight against TB by linking patients with supporters, or 'mitras', who provide assistance. Pulmonologist Dr Vikas Oswal said, 'The ₹1,000 is not meant to cover an entire diet, but it's a helpful supplement. The Ni-kshay Mitra initiative enables individuals and organisations to sponsor patients and provide regular food baskets.' However, patients from high-burden areas such as Govandi and Dharavi told HT that this support too is inconsistent. A 44-year-old autorickshaw driver from Dharavi, who is undergoing treatment for bone tuberculosis, said he last received the food basket in November 2024. 'The local politician who was distributing it stopped. The basket had apples, pomegranates, and grains—it helped us survive for seven months. I can't work due to my health, and my wife supports the household. TB medicines kill my appetite, but getting good food encourages me to eat better than just dry roti at home,' he said. According to the Ni-kshay Mitra dashboard, Maharashtra currently has 1,50,579 people undergoing TB treatment. While 14,194 donors have registered under the scheme—and 83.2% committed to providing food baskets for at least six months—coverage remains patchy. In Dadar, of the 3,041 patients under treatment, only 1,569 received food baskets. In another ward, just 1,646 out of 2,133 got assistance—barely 60%. 'There's a system,' said Acharya, 'but it's breaking where it's needed the most.' Dr Sandeep Sangale, Joint Director (TB and Leprosy), Maharashtra, dismissed claims that some TB patients are still receiving ₹500 instead of the revised ₹1,000 nutrition support. 'All patient accounts are centrally linked and payments are generated alphabetically through the system. There is no possibility of anyone receiving ₹500 now. The disbursal is done every three months, so patients in earlier payment cycles may have received a lump sum for three months. The next instalment will be credited once their cycle resumes,' he said.

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