Health
Minister Azad wants more people to donate blood
New Delhi, June 21 (IANS) India needs lakhs of people to
donate blood each day because of its huge population, union Health Minister
Ghulam Nabi Azad said on Friday, at a function marking International Blood
Donor Week.
‘India cannot just celebrate one
week of blood donation with such a huge population. We should have lakhs and
crores of blood donations per day,’ Azad said.
‘There is no dearth of donors, but
an atmosphere needs to be created. Then lots of lives can be saved. This is now
in our hands,’ the minister said.
At another function Friday, Azad
said: ‘Despite socio-economic development and advances in medical science,
tuberculosis remains a major public health concern globally. Millions of people
suffer and die from this disease every year,’ he said.
Since 2007, the case detection rate
of TB has gone up by more than 70 percent, in line with the global targets for
TB control, while maintaining the treatment success rate of more than 85
percent, according to health ministry figures.
Source: http://health.india.com
22.06.2013
WHO says dip
in stocks of TB drugs in India
New Delhi,
June 21 (IANS) The
World Health Organisation (WHO) on Friday said there was a dip in the buffers
stock of anti-tuberculosis (TB) drugs in India, but this would in no way affect
treatment of patients. ‘There is a dip in the buffer stock of anti-TB
drugs. We understand that the government of India has initiated steps to ensure
replenishment,’ Nata Menabde, WHO representative to India, said in a statement
here. However, the statement added that ‘no drugs are out of stock for
adult anti-TB patients for both drug sensitive and drug resistant TB’.
WHO provides technical and
policy-related support to the government’s anti-TB programme. She said:
‘The stock of paediatric anti-TB drugs, which is critically low is being
augmented through emergency procurement.’ For patients who have already
started the treatment, India’s programme provides one full course of TB drugs
for each patient, in patient-wise boxes. ‘This ensures that there is no
interruption of treatment due to drug shortage,’ she said.
India has one of the largest TB
control programme in the world with nearly 1.5 million TB patients placed under
treatment every year. The treatment protocol ensures that the whole course
of anti-TB drugs is given free to the patients with intense monitoring and
other patient support system. Since inception, the Revised National TB
Control Programme (RNTCP) has evaluated over 55 million people for TB and
initiated treatment for over 15.8 million TB patients
Source: http://health.india.com
22.06.2013
If you don’t have confidence, you’ll
always find a way not to win
Carl
Lewis
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