FAQ
FAQ
1. What is tuberculosis?
Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease caused by a
bacterium, Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
2. How is tuberculosis caused?
TB is spread through the air by a person suffering from TB. A
single patient can infect 10 or more people in a year, if not treated.
3. What are the symptoms of tuberculosis?
Common symptoms of tuberculosis are:
·
Cough
for two weeks or more, sometimes with blood-streaked sputum
·
Fever,
especially at night
·
Weight
loss
·
Loss
of appetite
4. Benefits of DOTS/ Why DOTS?
1.
More
than doubles the accuracy of TB diagnosis.
2.
Its
success rate is up to 95%.
3.
It
prevents the spread of tuberculosis by prioritizing sputum positive patients
for diagnosis and treatment, thus reducing the incidence and prevalence of TB.
4.
It
helps in alleviating poverty by saving lives, reducing the duration of illness
and preventing new infectious cases.
5.
It
improves the quality of care and removes stigma.
6.
It
prevents treatment failure and the emergence of MDR-TB by ensuring patient
adherence to treatment and uninterrupted supply of anti -TB drugs.
7.
It
lends credence to TB control efforts and the health system.
5. What is DOTS being implemented?
The DOTS strategy is in practice in more than 180 countries. By
March 2006, India has extended DOTS to the entire country.
6. What is the NTEP?
NTEP is National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP)
applying the principles of DOTS to the Indian context.
7. How many people die from TB in India
every year?
TB is one of the leading causes of mortality in india. It kills
more than 300,000 people in India every year.
8. Which is the strongest risk factor for
tuberculosis among adults and how does it affects the spread of TB?
The Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV, the virus that causes
AIDS) is the strongest risk factor for tuberculosis among adults. Tuberculosis
is one of the earliest opportunistic diseases to develop amongst persons
infected with HIV. HIV debilitates the immune system increasing the
vulnerability to TB and increasing the risk of progression from TB infection to
TB disease. An HIV positive person is six times (50-60% life time risk) more
likely of developing TB disease once infected with TB bacilli, as compared to
an HIV negative person, who has a 10% life-time risk.
9. Can tuberculosis be cured in HIV
co-infection?
Tuberculosis can be cured, even among HIV-infected persons. TB
treatment with DOTS reduces the morbidity and mortality among people living
with HIV.
10. For how long must tuberculosis
treatment be taken?
Tuberculosis treatment requires at least 6 months of treatment.
11. What is Multi-drug-resistant
tuberculosis?
Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR TB) is caused by strains
of the tuberculosis bacteria resistant to the two most effective
anti-tuberculosis drugs available - isoniazid and rifampicin. MDR TB can only
be diagnosed in a specialized laboratory.
12. What is the duration of treatment of
Multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis?
Multi-drug-resistant Tuberculosis requires at least 9-11 months
of treatment (shorter MDR regimen) with medicines which are 100 times more
expensive and often highly toxic. If patient is not eligible for shorter
regimen, then patient is given all oral longer regimen of 18-20 months. Recently 6 months regimen is also being
tried.