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Medical Tourism By Shobha Shukla
Tobacco and TBHealthcare professionals univocally agree that tobacco consumption increases the risk of TB incidence, poor treatment compliance, secondary mortality, and relapse. It also delays sputum conversion, and decreases treatment success rate.According to Dr. KS Sachdeva, Additional Director General, Central TB Division, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India: as much as 20% of the total disease burden from TB in India can be attributed to tobacco use. He told Citizen News Service - CNS that, ¡°Studies have shown that TB patients who smoked had much higher mortality rates compared to non-smokers; however, on quitting, their risk reduced substantially. Some focussed studies indicate that deaths due to TB are three to four times higher among ever-smokers than never-smokers. Out of the 700,000 tobacco smoking-related deaths in India every year, an estimated 200,000 deaths occur in those with pulmonary TB due to smoking.¡±¡°Since 2010, National Tobacco Control Programme (NTCP) and Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP) are coordinating for introducing tobacco cessation within RNTCP. Tobacco cessation is one of the major IEC messages in RNTCP. A pilot project for cessation of tobacco has been undertaken in Vadodara, Gujarat¡± informed Dr Sachdeva.Dr. Sushil Chaturvedi, District TB Officer, Lucknow, said that, ¡°The immune system of a TB patient is already compromised. If he/she is a tobacco user, it worsens the situation. Also, when a TB patient smokes in a public place he/she will cough more and thus likelihood of infecting others would increase. So ban on smoking in public places indirectly helps in TB control too."Tobacco and DiabetesDr. Kauser Usman, Associate Professor, Department of Medicine, King George¡¯s Medical University warns that tobacco is a major cause for heart disease and cancers. He told CNS that, ¡°Those suffering from hypertension and/or diabetes are already at a huge risk for heart disease. Tobacco in any form increases this risk further. The nicotine present in tobacco increases insulin resistance in the body and hampers good control of diabetes. We consider diabetes as a cardio vascular disease (CVD), as majority of diabetes patients die because of heart disease. Smoking is one of the major risk factors of CVD. So if a person living with diabetes is a smoker, he/she is much more at risk of heart diseases as compared to a non smoker.¡±Dr. Rama Kant, WHO Director General¡¯s Awardee for Tobacco Control, finds a very strong connection between diabetes and tobacco consumption. He pointed out that, ¡°In diabetes, most of the blood vessels (like those of limbs and heart) become narrow. If one uses tobacco, then these effects get multiplied. Patients of diabetes who consume tobacco are much more prone to have heart attacks, arterial insufficiency problems and even ocular problems than a normal person. So it is very hazardous for a diabetes patient to smoke at all. Diabetes control requires two things: supervised medical treatment and change in lifestyle wherein comes tobacco. Managing and controlling tobacco addiction is much more difficult than managing diabetes.¡±TB and DiabetesThere is a strong connection between diabetes and TB. Diabetes reduces the immunity of a patient, making him/her more prone to develop infections. TB happens in people who have reduced immunity/poor defence mechanism, (otherwise one can fight the infection). So patients of diabetes are more prone to have TB due to their low immunity.Dr. Sachdeva said that uncontrolled diabetes is associated with delay in sputum culture conversion, increased risk of recurrent TB and increased risk of death. Modelling studies indicate that 15%-20% of all TB patients in India also suffer from diabetes and that diabetes worsens TB treatment outcomes— increases rates of treatment failure, relapse and death.He informed that, ¡°The RNTCP policy is that all TB patients should be screened for diabetes and those found to be living with it must be managed for long term optimal glycaemic control with available resources under the National Programme for Prevention and Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases and Stroke (NPCDCS). Conversely, all persons with diabetes are to be screened for TB symptoms and those found symptomatic are to be tested for TB. The Central TB Division in collaboration with NPCDCS has already embarked upon screening all TB patients for diabetes in 100 districts, and the programme will soon be expanded to all districts.¡±Dr. Usman cautioned that, ¡°TB presents itself differently in people with diabetes. They may not develop fever or cough, but just have uncontrolled blood sugar despite good diabetes treatment. So every doctor should have high index of suspicion of TB in those patients of diabetes who are not responding to diabetes treatment. Hyper glycaemia in TB patients is difficult to control. Once blood sugar is uncontrolled it takes a lot of time to return to normal, so treatment of TB as well as diabetes becomes difficult in such patients. 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