India needs innovative strategies to eliminate TB

India Needs Innovative Strategies to Eliminate TB


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1921 BCG (Bacillus Calmette-Guérin) vaccine introduced — still the only licensed TB vaccine; protects infants against severe TB but offers limited protection to adolescents/adults [S4]
1962 National TB Programme (NTP) launched in India
1992 Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP) launched with DOTS strategy
2012 RNTCP expanded; mandatory TB notification introduced
2017 RNTCP renamed National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP) — target revised to eliminate TB by 2025 [S2]
2017 National Strategic Plan (NSP) 2017–25 to End TB; four pillars: Detect–Treat–Prevent–Build
Sept 2022 President Droupadi Murmu launched Pradhan Mantri TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan (PMTBMBA) [S5]
2023–24 100-Day TB Elimination Campaign conducted [S6]
2024 Union Health Ministry approved new shorter DR-TB treatment regimen [S3]
2025 India's self-set elimination deadline; 21% case reduction achieved vs. 2015 baseline [S1]
2026 Calls for differentiated vaccine strategies post new trial data on EPTB protection [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

Disease Classification: - Pulmonary TB (PTB) — affects lungs; infectious; drives transmission - Extrapulmonary TB (EPTB) — affects organs beyond lungs (lymph nodes, spine, brain, kidneys etc.); harder to diagnose; more debilitating; sometimes fatal [S4] - Subclinical TB — harbouring infection with minimal/no symptoms; a significant reservoir [S4] - Latent TB Infection (LTBI) — asymptomatic; reactivates under immunosuppression

Key Programme Facts: | Parameter | Detail | |-----------|--------| | Nodal Ministry | Ministry of Health & Family Welfare | | Programme | National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP) | | Parent Body | Central TB Division (CTD), MoHFW | | Treatment Framework | DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment Short-course) | | Elimination Target | 2025 (India); 2030 (WHO End TB Strategy) | | Diagnostic Network | 9,800+ rapid molecular testing (CBNAAT/TrueNat) facilities — world's largest [S1] | | Lab Network | 107 Culture & Drug Susceptibility Testing (C-DST) labs [S1] | | TB Notification | Mandatory since 2012; all providers must notify | | NSP Pillars | Detect, Treat, Prevent, Build | | Incidence Rate (India, 2023) | ~193 per 1,00,000 (WHO Global TB Report 2023) | | India's share of global burden | ~26–28% of global TB cases |

Key Schemes: - Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana — ₹500/month nutritional support to TB patients - Ni-kshay — IT-based patient tracking system - PMTBMBA — community-driven support; Ni-kshay Mitras (donors/supporters) [S5] - Universal Drug Susceptibility Testing (UDST) — test all patients for drug resistance before treatment


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Scientific / Technological

Administrative

Ethical / Governance

Geopolitical / Strategic


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. India's self-set TB elimination target: 2025 (global SDG target: 2030).
  2. TB is caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis; it is an airborne disease.
  3. National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme (NTEP) is the renamed form of RNTCP (renamed 2017).
  4. Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana provides ₹500/month nutritional support to TB patients — under MoHFW.
  5. Pradhan Mantri TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan was launched by President Droupadi Murmu in September 2022.
  6. India operates the world's largest network of rapid molecular TB testing: 9,800+ facilities [S1].
  7. TrueNat — India-developed portable molecular TB diagnostic device (point-of-care); eligible for NTEP procurement.
  8. VPM1002 — recombinant BCG-based TB vaccine candidate; Phase III trial conducted by ICMR in India.
  9. M72/AS01E — TB vaccine candidate developed by GSK in partnership with the Gates Foundation; showed ~50% efficacy in Phase IIb.
  10. BCG (Bacillus Calmette-Guérin) was introduced in 1921 — still the only licensed TB vaccine over 100 years later.
  11. Extrapulmonary TB (EPTB) affects organs other than the lungs; it is non-infectious but harder to diagnose than pulmonary TB [S4].
  12. Universal Drug Susceptibility Testing (UDST) — NTEP policy mandating all TB patients be tested for drug resistance before treatment initiation.
  13. India's TB incidence declined 21% from 2015 to 2024 (WHO Global TB Report 2025) [S1].
  14. TB deaths in India declined 28% from 2015 to 2024 [S1].
  15. Nodal Ministry for NTEP: Ministry of Health & Family Welfare; implementing body: Central TB Division (CTD).

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping:

GS Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health
GS-II Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation
GS-III Science and Technology — developments and their applications and effects in everyday life
GS-IV (Essay potential) — Ethical dimensions of public health programmes

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "Despite India's ambitious 2025 TB elimination target, the country faces structural barriers that no single technological intervention can overcome. Critically analyse the gaps in India's National Tuberculosis Elimination Programme and suggest a multi-pronged strategy." (GS-II, 15M)

  2. "New TB vaccine candidates like M72/AS01E signal a breakthrough but also reveal the limits of a 'one-size-fits-all' vaccine approach. Examine the scientific and public health challenges in developing an effective TB vaccine for adults, with reference to India's burden." (GS-III, 10M)

  3. "The Pradhan Mantri TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan's Ni-kshay Mitra model blurs the line between state responsibility and philanthropic voluntarism. Evaluate its potential and ethical concerns in the context of universal health coverage." (GS-II/GS-IV, 15M)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Ayushman Bharat / PM-JAY TB treatment costs are catastrophic; AB-PMJAY covers hospitalisation — linkage with NTEP financing
Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) MDR-TB and XDR-TB are the AMR crisis within TB; same policy frameworks
BCG Vaccine & Childhood Immunisation (UIP) BCG is part of Universal Immunisation Programme; understanding its limitations anchors the new vaccine debate
National Health Mission (NHM) NTEP is housed and funded under NHM; understanding NHM architecture is essential
India's Global Health Diplomacy ICMR, WHO India partnerships, India's role in Stop TB Partnership — GS-II international angle
One Health Approach Zoonotic TB (M. bovis) — animal-human-environment interface; increasingly in syllabus
Malnutrition & TB Co-morbidity TB incidence is tightly linked to undernutrition; PM POSHAN–NTEP convergence
HIV–TB Co-infection India has dual burden; NTEP–NACP (National AIDS Control Programme) co-ordination is tested

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong year for NTEP renaming — RNTCP was renamed NTEP in 2017, not 2019 or 2020. Aspirants often confuse this with the NSP 2017–25 launch.
  2. Confusion between elimination and eradication — India targets TB elimination (< 1 case per 10 lakh population), not eradication (zero global cases). These are distinct public health thresholds.
  3. PMTBMBA launched by PM vs. President — It was launched by President Droupadi Murmu (not PM Modi), at Rudrapur, Uttarakhand, in September 2022 [S5].
  4. BCG protects everyone equally — WRONG — BCG offers strong protection to neonates against severe/miliary TB but has variable and limited efficacy in adolescents and adults — a classic trap for science questions [S4].
  5. Ni-kshay = Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana — WRONGNi-kshay is the IT-based patient tracking portal; Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana is the ₹500/month nutritional support scheme; Ni-kshay Mitra refers to community supporters under PMTBMBA. These are three distinct but related elements.

11. Sources