Challenges aplenty for rural, tribal, migrant groups in fighting TB: report


Challenges for Rural, Tribal & Migrant Groups in Fighting TB

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1962 National TB Control Programme (NTCP) launched — India's first structured TB programme.
1997 Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP) adopted DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course) strategy.
2017 National Strategic Plan for TB Elimination 2017–2025 set the target of eliminating TB by 2025 (incidence <10/lakh, mortality <3/lakh). [S5]
2018 Nikshay Poshan Yojana (NPY) launched — nutritional incentive of ₹500/month (later raised to ₹1,000/month) via DBT. [S2]
2020 RNTCP renamed National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP) — signalling policy shift from "control" to "elimination." [S2]
2022 Pradhan Mantri TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan (PMTBMBA) launched by President Droupadi Murmu — community-based Ni-Kshay Mitra (benefactor) model. [S4]
2024–25 Ni-Kshay Poshan Yojana disbursed >₹3,202 crore to 1.13 crore beneficiaries via DBT. [S2]
2025 Deadline for elimination — India acknowledged the goal is unlikely to be fully met; focus shifted to high-burden sub-populations.

4. Core Static Facts

Programme / Scheme Details

Key Numbers

Indicator Figure
India's share of global TB burden ~27% [S1]
TB incidence decline (2015–2024) 21% (vs. global average 8.3% in 2015–2023) [S2][S3]
TB deaths decline (2015–2024) 28% [S2]
Tribal share of population 8.6% (~111 million) [S3]
Tribal share of TB incidence 9.8% [S3]
NPY monthly nutritional support ₹1,000/month (raised from ₹500) [S2]
Total NPY disbursement >₹3,202 crore to 1.13 crore beneficiaries [S2]
India's elimination target year 2025 (global target: 2030) [S2]

Vulnerable Sub-Populations (per Jan 2026 Report)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Social

Economic

Administrative / Governance

Scientific / Technological

Legal / Constitutional

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. India accounts for approximately 27% of global TB cases, the highest of any single country. [S1]
  2. India's TB elimination target is 2025 — five years ahead of the global SDG target of 2030. [S2]
  3. The renamed programme is National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP) — previously RNTCP (renamed in 2020). [S2]
  4. Nikshay Poshan Yojana (NPY) provides ₹1,000/month nutritional support to TB patients via DBT (raised from ₹500). [S2]
  5. NPY has disbursed over ₹3,202 crore to 1.13 crore beneficiaries. [S2]
  6. Tribal communities constitute 8.6% of India's population but account for 9.8% of TB incidence. [S3]
  7. Pradhan Mantri TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan (PMTBMBA) was launched by President Droupadi Murmu (2022) under NTEP. [S4]
  8. India achieved a 17.7% decline in TB incidence from 2015–2023 — more than twice the global average of 8.3%. [S3]
  9. The report on TB challenges (Jan 2026) was published by stakeholders including the Women's Collective Forum. [S1]
  10. The report calls for nationwide mapping of non-notified settlements to locate high-burden migrant clusters. [S1]
  11. Migrant TB patients face critical obstacles: high mobility, informal employment, limited health access — leading to delayed diagnosis and disrupted treatment. [S1]
  12. The Nikshay platform is the IT-based case notification portal under NTEP. [S2]
  13. An integrated migrant health framework combining TB, HIV, NCD, and vector-borne disease services at common delivery points is recommended by the Jan 2026 report. [S1]
  14. The National Strategic Plan for TB Elimination 2017–2025 set targets of incidence <10/lakh and mortality <3/lakh by 2025. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping

Paper Syllabus Heading
GS-II Health — government policies and interventions; issues relating to vulnerable sections (tribal, migrants)
GS-II Social Justice — welfare schemes for vulnerable sections
GS-I Population and associated issues; urbanisation; migration
GS-IV Ethics of governance — accountability in public health delivery

Plausible Mains Question Stems

  1. "India has pledged to eliminate tuberculosis by 2025, yet rural, tribal, and migrant populations remain disproportionately burdened. Critically analyse the structural barriers and suggest a multi-sectoral framework to address them." (GS-II, 250 words)
  2. "Evaluate the National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP) with special reference to its efficacy in reaching marginalised communities. What administrative and technological reforms are needed for last-mile delivery?" (GS-II, 250 words)
  3. "Migrant workers present unique challenges to India's disease-elimination programmes. Using TB as a case study, propose an integrated inter-state migrant health framework." (GS-II, 150 words)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
National Health Mission (NHM) Backbone delivery infrastructure for TB services in rural/tribal areas
Ayushman Bharat – PM-JAY Financial protection for TB patients hospitalised for DR-TB
Inter-State Migrant Workmen Act, 1979 Legal framework (and its gaps) for migrant health entitlements
PESA Act, 1996 & Fifth Schedule Governance of Scheduled Areas where tribal TB burden is concentrated
Malnutrition & POSHAN Abhiyaan Malnutrition is the single largest driver of TB reactivation in India
Drug-Resistant TB (MDR/XDR-TB) Interrupted treatment in migrant/tribal populations accelerates DR-TB risk
SDG 3 (Good Health & Well-Being) Target 3.3 specifically mandates ending TB epidemic by 2030
COVID-19 and Health System Resilience Pandemic-induced disruption of TB services set back elimination timelines

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong year for NTEP renaming: The programme was renamed from RNTCP to NTEP in 2020, not 2017 (the year the National Strategic Plan was released).
  2. NPY amount confusion: Nutritional support was raised to ₹1,000/month — aspirants often cite the older figure of ₹500. Also note: total per patient over course of treatment is ₹3,000–₹6,000 depending on regimen duration.
  3. Conflating PMTBMBA with NTEP: PMTBMBA (PM TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan) is a community engagement initiative within NTEP — not a separate standalone programme; implementing ministry is MoHFW, not NITI Aayog.
  4. India's elimination target vs. global target: India's self-set target is 2025; global SDG/WHO End TB target is 2030 — frequently swapped in MCQs.
  5. Tribal TB share vs. population share: Tribals = 8.6% of population but 9.8% of TB incidence — not 10% or equal to population share; the gap itself is the point.

11. Sources