Duangkamol Donchaum who writes for CNS has produced an audio podcast on the link between tuberculosis (TB) and diabetes in Thailand and also an article in Thai language. To read the Thai language article, click here or to listen to Thai language podcast, click here
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Government of India seeks YouTube videos on need for new TB drugs
The Government of India's Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Open Source Drug Discovery (OSDD) and Vigyan Prasar have announced an initiative calling for submissions of YouTube videos on the topic: "The need for new tuberculosis (TB) drugs." According to the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development (TB Alliance), "A shorter [anti-TB] drug regimen would reduce lost work-time and lessen the economic impact of TB on individuals' lives, and in turn help stabilize families, save and enrich the lives of millions of children, and enable a healthier, more productive labor force in many TB-endemic countries."
Online consultation: Lessons from roll-out of MDR-TB services
Citizen News Service (CNS), a partner of the Stop TB Partnership, and the global Stop-TB eForum along with partners are hosting an online consultation to document community perspectives and learn lessons on what worked and what didn’t in rolling out MDR-TB services in different countries/ contexts. These lessons are very important, especially experiences of affected communities, we believe, and must not be missed. These lessons should inform the ongoing and future planned roll-out (and scale up) of MDR-TB services at all levels.
GUIDING QUESTIONS
* Please share your experiences and perspectives of what works and what doesn’t work in your local settings where MDR-TB related services are available?
* What are the key lessons from this experience, that must be taken into account before scaling up the MDR-TB services any further for enhanced public health outcomes?
GUIDING QUESTIONS
* Please share your experiences and perspectives of what works and what doesn’t work in your local settings where MDR-TB related services are available?
* What are the key lessons from this experience, that must be taken into account before scaling up the MDR-TB services any further for enhanced public health outcomes?
Top Tuberculosis Scientists Warn of Urgent Need to Develop Effective TB Vaccines
With cases of drug resistant tuberculosis (TB) on the rise globally, top TB researchers at a briefing today in London, called for greater focus on the quest for new vaccines—a crucial cost-effective method for addressing the growing threat. The WHO estimates that 9% cases of multidrug-resistant (MDR) TB in fact have extensively drug-resistant (XDR) TB for which even fewer drugs are effective, and a recent research published in The Lancet in August suggests that levels of drug-resistant TB are higher than previously appreciated and rates of XDR-TB range from 0.8-15.2% of MDR-TB cases at study sites across the world.
Health Programmes must collaboratively address TB–Diabetes
With growing strong evidence on the dangerous communion between tuberculosis (TB) and diabetes in India, government health programmes must no longer delay implementing TB-diabetes collaborative activities. “Like the HIV/AIDS epidemic, the diabetes epidemic threatens to cause an escalation in TB incidence. China and India constitute 40% of the world’s diabetes population of 400 million people which is likely to go up to half a billion by 2020. If we do not seriously think about the link between TB diabetes my feeling is that it may begin to derail some of the good advances made in India and China on TB control” said Professor (Dr) Anthony D Harries, Senior Advisor, International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union).
Save Human Lives And Not The Tobacco Industry
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Tobacco industry's allied groups lobbied against global tobacco treaty provisions |
Beware: All Forms of Tobacco Are Harmful!
The Smokeless Tobacco Association, the All India Kattha Factories Association and the Central Arecanut and Cocoa Marketing and Processing Co-operative Ltd have suddenly assumed the responsibility to inform people about the relative merits of gutkha over cigarettes. Their bold and blatant advertisement splashed in prominent newspapers is part of a country-wide campaign in an apparent retaliation to the ban on gutkha (tobacco laced pan masala), currently effective in 14 states of India. It wickedly accuses the 14 states of treating cigarettes to be beneficial for health and. The advertisement questions if it is just and fair to ban gutkha and not cigarettes, and reads that:--(i) one pouch of gutkha contains 0.2gm of tobacco as opposed to 0.63gm of tobacco in one cigarette; (ii) cigarette has 4000 chemicals while smokeless tobacco has 3000 chemical; (iii) cigarette smoke affects the health of non-smokers while gutkha does not; (iv) ban on gutkha will render lakhs of shopkeepers and farmers without a livelihood.
All Is Not Well With Our Minds
October 9, 2012—Just one day before this year's World Menatl Health Day, 56 year old Varsha Bhosle, a political columnist and journalist and singer Asha Bhosle's daughter, shoots herself to death in her flat in Mumbai. She had reportedly made two suicide attempts in the past and was currently undergoing treatment for depression. Incidentally, the latest figures peg India's suicide rate the second highest in the world with 187,000 suicides taking place in 2010.
October, 2012--In Bhopal a 13 year old boy hangs himself to death after a minor squabble with his younger brother over watching a particular cartoon channel on TV. August, 2012-- A 13 year old son of a roadside stall owner in Nagpur commits suicide by hanging from the ceiling fan with his mother’s dupatta, after being scolded by her for neglecting his studies.
October, 2012--In Bhopal a 13 year old boy hangs himself to death after a minor squabble with his younger brother over watching a particular cartoon channel on TV. August, 2012-- A 13 year old son of a roadside stall owner in Nagpur commits suicide by hanging from the ceiling fan with his mother’s dupatta, after being scolded by her for neglecting his studies.
The Dangerous Communion of Tuberculosis and Diabetes
In 2011 India had 61.3 million people living with diabetes (17% of the global incidence of 366 million) with 983,000 deaths (20% of the global figure of 4.6 million) attributable to the disease. India also accounts for 21% of the global incidence of tuberculosis (TB) with 1.98 million people developing TB and nearly 300,000 dying of it every year. Diabetes Mellitus is a non curable, non communicable metabolic disease that occurs when either the pancreas fail to produce sufficient insulin, (the hormone that regulates blood sugar), or when the body cannot use the insulin it produces effectively. It can be treated and controlled effectively although, over a period of time, it does increase the risk of heart disease and stroke and can cause kidney failure, blindness and nerve damage.
On a Toilet Trail
Mohan Das Karamchand Gandhi – affectionately and respectfully called Bapu or Mahatma - who played a key role in the Indian freedom struggle, had once said “Sanitation is more important than independence.” Paying tributes to Gandhiji on his 143rd birth anniversary, the Indian government has decided to take this message forward by starting a Nirmal Bharat Yatra (Clean India March). This
2000 kilo metres long Yatra is being launched on October 3 from Wardha
district in Maharashtra. In the next 56 days it proposes to cover five
states which, according to the 2011 census have the lowest sanitation
coverage in India, namely Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar
Pradesh and lastly Bihar where it would culminate on November 19, which
is World Toilet Day.
MDR-TB, tobacco control, Lung diseases to be in focus at 2012 global meet
More than 3,000 lung health experts and advocates from countries around the world will come together at the 43rd Union World Conference on Lung Health in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to discuss the latest opportunities and challenges in the fight against lung disease. The conference organised by the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union), will be held at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre from 13th to 17th November 2012.
New Interventions To Treat Diabetic Foot Infections
In an exclusive interview given to Citizen News Service onsite at the Amrita Endocrinology, Diabetes and Diabetic Foot Conference (AEDFC 2012) held recently at the Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences (AIMS) in Kochi, two renowned and senior stalwarts of the institute’s Department of Endocrinology, Diabetic Lower Limb and Podiatric Surgery, Dr Harish Kumar and Dr Ajit Kumar Varma, shared some of the latest developments that have taken place at AIMS in the field of diabetic foot management.
Never Fall In Love With Technology...
….So said Dr Mitchell Warren, Executive Director of AVAC: Global Advocacy for HIV Prevention, in an exclusive interview given to CNS onsite at the AIDS Vaccine 2012. Underlining the importance of understanding the complexities of science and community, he emphasized that, “None of the HIV/AIDS prevention methods can be the answer to the problem by themselves. It is not the product but the person who uses it that prevents HIV. A condom will not work if not used. Even if we have the gel or a vaccine unless people think about their risk and go for testing nothing will work. So, one should resist the temptation to fall in love with technology - as all scientific interventions require behavioural changes—not only at the individual level but also at the health system levels.”
ICPS Roll out in Uttar Pradesh Possible within the next three months?
The Integrated Child Protection Scheme (ICPS) is a much awaited initiative in Uttar Pradesh. And Rightly so with hopes of both, the government agencies as well as the private NGOs and activists pinned on the scheme for a better, safer and a more organized system of ushering in a protective environment for children in the state. Once implemented the ICPS is being touted as the ultimate accountability apparatus for care and protection as well as an effective juvenile justice system in the state.
No getting to zero new HIV infections in ASEAN without women
Young women, female sex workers, transgender women, women who use drugs and women living with HIV have called on ASEAN to support women and girls living with and affected by HIV. On September 24 and 25, 2012, ASEAN delegates from the ASEAN Task Force on AIDS (ATFOA) and the ASEAN Committee on Women (ACW) gathered together for a “Consultative Meeting on HIV and Key Affected Women and Girls: Reducing Intimate Partner Transmission of HIV in ASEAN” in Luang Prabang, Lao PDR. Civil society and community groups representing key affected women and girls called for scaling up action and resources for policies and programs that address the rights of women and girls in the context of HIV and AIDS.
Charcot Foot In Diabetes: An Enigma
Charcot neuropathic osteo-arthropathy, commonly referred to as the Charcot Foot, is a condition affecting the bones, joints, and soft tissues of the foot and ankle. The disorder was first brought to the world’s attention in 1983 by Dr Jean Martin Charcot when he referred to the disease process as a complication of syphilis in the knee joint in his patient. Syphilis was believed to be the most common cause of Charcot arthropathy until 1936, when Dr William Jordan linked it to diabetes. Diabetes is now one of the leading causes of Charcot Foot especially in patients with a long history of the disease. In India the incidence is 1%, but detection rates are increasing, perhaps due more awareness.
Comprehensive and integrated action must to control heart disease
World Heart Day is on 29th September
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the world's largest killers, claiming 17.3 million (1 crore 73 lakhs) lives a year. Risk factors for heart disease and stroke include raised blood pressure, cholesterol and glucose levels, smoking, inadequate intake of fruit and vegetables, overweight, obesity and physical inactivity. Heart disease and stroke can be prevented through healthy diet, regular physical activity and avoiding tobacco smoke. Individuals can reduce their risk of CVDs by engaging in regular physical activity, avoiding tobacco use and second-hand tobacco smoke, choosing a diet rich in fruit and vegetables and avoiding foods that are high in fat, sugar and salt, and maintaining a healthy body weight.Look At Your Feet And Listen To Them
A three day Amrita Endocrinology, Diabetes and Diabetic Foot Conference (AEDFC 2012) was recently held in Kochi at the Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences (AIMS). It brought together clinicians, surgeons and researchers from across the country and the world to re energize the grey cells and deliberate upon various problems related to endocrinology and diabetes, with special emphasis on the management of diabetic foot infections, which could so often be life/limb threatening and yet are largely misunderstood and/or ignored by the public as well as medical fraternity.
Salvaging the foot in people with diabetes
With over 200,000 diabetic foot related amputations in India every year, it is critically important to do all that is warranted to salvage, and to care for, the feet of the people living with diabetes. Dr Robert Frykberg, Chief of the Podiatry Section, Carl T Hayden VA Medical Center, Phoenix, Arizona, USA, said to Citizen News Service (CNS) at the Amrita Endocrine, Diabetes and Diabetic Foot Conference (AEDFC 2012): "Rate of amputations is probably higher in India with 200,000 amputations per year in India [than in USA]. About 15-20% patients of diabetic foot might end up with amputations."
Call for comprehensive and well-coordinated care for diabetic foot
Foot care for people with diabetes attains a high priority, given the risk they have for developing complications which, if not cared for, might lead to serious outcomes, such as amputation. In the hospital setting, caring for feet of people with diabetes needs a well-coordinated and multi-speciality response that engages different specialist doctors and other healthcare providers. This was a clear message coming out of the Amrita Endocrine, Diabetes and Diabetic Foot Conference (AEDFC 2012) held in Kochi, India.
Microbicides Set To Change The landscape Of HIV Prevention
The concept of microbicides as an HIV prevention tool was first proposed 20 years ago. Microbicide is a product applied topically in the vagina or rectum with the intention of preventing sexually transmitted infections (STIs) including HIV. It can take different forms such as a gel, foam or a ring. The idea to use the ARV-based tenovofir gel was mooted in 2003 but the proof of concept came only in 2010. The microbicide tenofovir gel was found safe and effective in reducing the risk of HIV in women who used it before and after vaginal sex in a study called CAPRISA 004. The CAPRISA 004 study demonstrated an overall 39% reduction in HIV infection, with 54% HIV reduction in women who used tenofovir gel consistently, providing proof of concept that microbicides indeed can prevent sexually transmitted HIV if used consistently.
An HIV vaccine will never work in isolation
Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision partially protects against HIV, HPV and Herpes
Modeling based on a timeline where 80 percent coverage of Voluntary Medical Male Circumcision (VMMC) of men age 15-49 is achieved by 2015 suggests that more than 20 percent of new HIV infections would be averted by 2025, with financial savings of an estimated USD 16.6 billion in future medical costs, said Cindra Feuer, Communications and Policy Advisor, AVAC - Global Advocacy for HIV Prevention at AIDS Vaccine 2012.
Long road ahead for insensitivity plagued juvenile justice system
(Names of children have been changed to protect their identity) 12 year old Kushan, has just turned into a Juvenile in Conflict with Law. His crime-shooting dead his step mother with his father’s revolver. While the act itself may sound quite scandalous, what is even more outrageous is the fact the child despite having surrendered to the police himself post the shooting, and clearly showing no malafide intention that precipitated the act, has been allegedly apprehended and sent to an observation home in Muzzaffarnagar, UP being treated as an aberrant.
Vaccines: Final Nail In HIV Coffin?
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Long road to vaccines |
Celebrating The First Ever Global Female Condom Day

Vaginal Microbicide offers hope for partial anti-HIV protection
There are clear reasons why the vaginal microbicide research and development offers more hope in 2012. Vaginal microbicide (anti-HIV gel) research is going ahead and scientists are waiting for study results to tell them more whether the CAPRISA-004 study results that reported 39% overall efficacy for women in July 2010 can be replicated in another study called FACTS-001, and if so, is the evidence strong enough for licensure.
Combination Prevention: Can it turn the HIV tide?
If we really want to turn the HIV tide, we cannot afford to wait for a 'magic bullet', but do a better job with a broad range of HIV prevention and treatment tools and approaches at hand. The good news is that there is a growing list of evidence-based HIV prevention approaches that should be scaled up without delay to turn the tide (along with treatment and care). The bad news is that highly effective HIV vaccines may not be coming so soon. The sooner vaccines come, the earlier we can put the 'nail in the coffin' of eliminating HIV (provided we implement non-vaccine modalities of HIV prevention and care 'really really well'), said Dr Anthony Fauci, Director, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institute of Health (NIH), USA, at the AIDS Vaccine 2012.
Avoid Amputation: Manage The Diabetic Foot
India is home to the second highest number of people living with diabetes in the world, after China. Today there are over 45 million people grappling with the disease, and the numbers show no signs of reducing. Amongst other health hazards, diabetes often leads to peripheral vascular disease, involving both the macro and micro circulation. Statistics reveal that 15% of all those living with the disease will develop foot problems related to diabetes, and may suffer from various deformities of the toes and feet, commonly called ‘diabetic foot conditions’. These can develop from a combination of causes including neuropathy (nerve damage) and/or poor blood supply to the foot, which creates areas of raised pressures in the soles of the feet, where ulcers develop. These ulcers act as portals for the entry for bacteria leading to serious infections, which in the already immune compromised patients can result in amputations or even death.
Progress and Challenges in the Search for an HIV Vaccine
Scientists from around the world will gather in Boston next week to present more than 400 new research studies updating global progress in the search for a safe and effective HIV vaccine. AIDS Vaccine 2012, the world's only scientific meeting dedicated exclusively to HIV vaccine research, runs Sunday, 9 September through Wednesday, 12 September. The annual AIDS vaccine meeting is hosted by the Global HIV Vaccine Enterprise a unique collaboration of HIV vaccine research, funding, advocacy and stakeholder organizations. The Local Hosts for AIDS Vaccine 2012 are the Harvard University Center for AIDS Research and the Ragon Institute of Massachusetts General Hospital, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University.
Indoor Air Pollution Not A Public Health Issue in Zimbabwe
LOVING memories of my grandmother’s cooking hut in the backyard of Zimbabwe are still fresh inside me like morning dawn. Yet, I also remember how the hut would fill up with smoke that choked my throat and stung my eyes and how I sat through it all enjoying a meal or engaged in conversation with loved ones. Little did I know that it was a health hazard. Like most Zimbabweans – approximately 70 per cent of the population lives in rural areas – it was a normal facet of our lives. In fact, if one revealed any lack of resilience against the smoke, they would be regarded as a snobbish urbanite. And not many people are willing to be associated with such a tag.
Staff accountability is defined in Juvenile Justice Act
At a recent training workshop for Child Welfare Committee (CWC) members, at which I was invited as the guest expert on the issue of "Child Rights and Convergence of Related Agencies to Ensure access to Juvenile Justice System for a child in distress," a very poignant question was raised by a CWC Member from Uttarakhand: "When we know that institutions like children homes and observation homes are 'hell holes' where the child is likely to be exposed to more abuse and neglect, then knowingly why do we shove these children down these 'wells of horrors'?"
Indoor Air Pollution in Thailand
To read the Thai language article written by Duangkamol Donchaum, Citizen News Service (CNS) Thailand, click here, and to listen to the audio broadcast in Thai language, click here
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