China's Ministry of Health announced
on Wednesday, the day before World TB Day, that about 550,000
people with infectious pulmonary tuberculosis were treated free of
charge by the government in 2004.
"If one infectious pulmonary TB
patient infects 10 to 15 healthy people, free treatment kept six
million Chinese safe from TB last year," said Qi Xiaoqiu,
director-general of the health ministry's disease control
department.
The World Health Organization (WHO)
reported last July that each year China has 1.4 million new
tuberculosis cases, second only to India in the number of new
cases, and 650,000 of which are highly infectious.
China estimates that there are about
4.5 million sufferers in the country, but according to the WHO the
detection rate, while markedly improved, is still only about 40
percent.
In 2001, the Chinese government
allocated 40 million yuan (US$4.9 million) annually to provide free
treatment to infectious pulmonary TB patients. Last year, the
central government increased the budget to 300 million yuan.
"With the additional financial
input, we are able to provide free treatment to all active
pulmonary TB patients," Qi said.
Qi said China's goal is to have
nationwide access by the end of this year to the WHO recommended TB
control strategy, known as DOTS, which has a 90 percent recovery
rate and a 70 percent detection rate.
One of the nation's Millennium
Development Goals is to halve TB prevalence by 2015.
"China will continue to enhance all
the preventative and control measures to curb the spread of TB in
China and fulfill its promise to the international community," he
said.
Tuberculosis is spread by coughing,
sneezing, spitting and even talking. Each year about 2 million
people worldwide die from this curable disease. It kills more young
people and adults than any other infectious disease and is the
world's biggest killer of women.
Nearly nine million people develop
the disease annually, the vast majority of them in developing
countries, where 99 percent of all TB deaths occur. According to
the WHO, TB infection is currently spreading at the rate of one
person per second.
About one-third of the world's
population, or around 2 billion people, carry the TB bacteria but
only about 10 percent develop the active disease.
The focus of this year's World TB
Day is frontline TB care providers, including grassroots-level
public health staff, lab technicians, nongovernmental
organizations, community groups, nurses, private medical
practitioners, pharmacists, shopkeepers, students and patient
activists.
(China.org.cn, Xinhua News Agency
March 24, 2005)
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