CDC and Partners Tackle Drug-resistant TB in India
Posted On: 2016
- Tuberculosis (TB) is the number one infectious disease killer worldwide. Unlike
- drug-resistant TB, TB is preventable, treatable, and curable. We must address TB both at home and abroad to ensure a safer, healthier America.
- Drug-resistant TB threatens our ability to treat and control TB. Drug-resistant forms of TB have spread to every country around the world.
- To protect Americans from resistance threats, CDC is reinforcing international collaborations and capacities for antimicrobial resistance prevention, surveillance, and infection control with countries worldwide.
- Mumbai, India is one of the highest burden municipalities for drug-resistant TB in the world. CDC is working to address key gaps in this serious and growing epidemic, including improving TB infection control, diagnostic and treatment services, and treatment adherence.
- With local experts, CDC helped establish an Airborne Infection Control Unit (AICU) in Mumbai in September 2016. The AICU helps healthcare facilities implement TB infection control best practices to reduce healthcare-associated transmission of drug-resistant TB. CDC provides ongoing training, but the unit is run by local partners.
- In addition, CDC is working with partners in Mumbai to improve TB laboratory quality, TB treatment and adherence, and proficiency testing to improve treatment outcomes.
- By sharing its world-class scientific expertise, CDC can strengthen local capacity to quickly detect and treat the threat of drug-resistant TB and contain its spread.
Tuberculosis (TB) is the number one infectious disease killer worldwide but, unlike drug-resistant TB, it is preventable, treatable, and curable. Drug-resistant TB—when the bacteria that causes TB disease is able to avoid the effects of antibiotics—threatens our ability to treat and control the disease. In October 2016, the World Health Organization estimated [PDF -6.35 MB] that drug-resistant TB had risen to more than half a million cases worldwide. Stronger TB infection control and improved detection and treatment practices can help reduce rates of drug-resistant TB worldwide.
Because TB is an airborne disease that is transmitted from person to person, it knows no borders. We must address TB both at home and abroad to ensure a safer, healthier America. While TB can have a severe economic toll, efforts to end TB are one of the best investments for improving U.S. and global health, security, and economic development. Patients often face staggering costs when seeking TB diagnosis and treatment, which can put families in poverty and undermines economic gains and stability. Efforts to end TB are a best buy—reaping $43 return for every $1 invested.
Transformative Investments
CDC’s AR Solutions Initiative is implementing several TB projects to reduce rates of drug-resistant TB worldwide:
- Conducting a one-year study to optimize treatment protocol using early bactericidal activity study methodology in India.
- Evaluating the use of smartphones and video to monitor patient treatment and ensure therapy is completed.
- Increasing global technology for testing and treating TB to stop it at its source.
- Working closely with more than 25 ministries of health to strengthen TB control efforts
CDC is Combating Drug-resistant TB
To protect Americans from antimicrobial resistance threats, like drug-resistant TB, CDC is reinforcing international collaborations and capacities for antimicrobial resistance prevention, surveillance, and TB infection control with countries worldwide.
CDC is working on the ground in 25 countries to find, cure, and prevent TB and protect Americans both here and abroad by:
- Improving access to better screening, contact tracing, and diagnostic tools to find missing TB cases.
- Evaluating better TB treatment regimens and improving access to care and treatment.
- Breaking the cycle of transmission by strengthening TB infection control, identifying hotspots to target screening efforts, and scaling-up treatment to prevent TB among vulnerable populations.
One example of these efforts can be seen in Mumbai, India, one of the highest burden municipalities for drug-resistant TB in the world. By working together in Mumbai to address key gaps in this serious and growing epidemic, like TB infection control and treatment compliance, CDC and its partners can help reduce drug-resistant TB rates and contain its spread.