Pakistan: Kiani vows to spare no effort to eradicate TB by 2030
ISLAMABAD, December 7, 2018: With 0.5 million new tuberculosis cases emerging every year, the federal health minister said that they will be making all possible efforts to eradicate the disease by 2030.
This was stated by Federal Health Minister Aamer Mehmood Kiani
in a high-level meeting with the World Health Organisation (WHO)
officials from their Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office
(EMRO) headquarters.
The meeting discussed putting
greater focus on tuberculosis (TB) higher up on the political
agenda of the government through the and to increase the
commitment of all stakeholders to end the disease by 2030.
Moreover,
it discussed attracting more partners for the TB control
programme in Pakistan, empowering affected communities towards
ending the TB epidemic in the country.
The meeting
also aimed at increasing public awareness regarding the threat
of TB, combatting the stigma and discrimination against TB
patients, mobilising domestic resources to fight the disease and
reducing the catastrophic treatment cost on TB affected
families.
The health minister said that there was a
need to promote health in all policies to address social,
environmental and economic determinants of health.
He
further said that the government is expanding health insurance
to the poorest families in all districts of the country and
protect them from catastrophic health expenditure. Moreover, the
ministry has set up a national Integrated Disease Surveillance
and Response (IDSR) system for the prompt and efficient response
during disease outbreaks.
The health minister said TB
is one of the priority diseases for prevention and control. The
government is fully committed to the SDGs and ending TB
strategic goals. We are in a continuous struggle in setting the
strategic directions to find the missing 140,000 and positioning
ourselves to tackle the emerging threat of the multi-drug
resistant TB. Some of the measures have already been taken and
some are planned.
The minister also talked about
improvement in the health system, structure referral linkages
between primary- secondary and tertiary levels of health care
delivery and encouraging public-private partnership.
He
also touched on the ongoing revamp of the Lady Health Worker
(LHW) programme to improve community-level essential health
services.
Kiani said that they will develop
multi-sectoral collaboration linkages with other ministries and
departments for devising an effective response regarding TB
control.
Little awareness leads to an increase in TB cases
Meanwhile, health experts have expressed concerns over the
growing number of TB cases in the country, noting that every
year 0.5 million new cases emerge in Pakistan.
During
the 61st quarterly inter-provincial meeting in Islamabad,
experts said that there were as many as 140,000 patients who
were unaware of the disease. They added that due to lack of
awareness, TB cases have seen a substantial spike in recent
years.
Pakistan is also estimated as having the
fourth highest prevalence of multidrug-resistant TB globally.
They said that the key reasons for the emergence of drug
resistance from of TB included late diagnosis, unsupervised,
inappropriate and inadequate drug regimes, poor follow-up and
lack of a social support programme for high-risk populations.
They
said that the TB treatment programme, the Directly Observed
Treatment Short-Course (DOTS) was a ray of hope for patients and
the problem was that the patients usually stop using medicines
before their dose is completed due to which the virus gets
stronger, they noted.
Experts said that the high
prevalence of disease rate was making Pakistan fifth among high
burden countries worldwide and accounts for 61 per cent of the
TB burden in the region.
Source:
The Express Tribune