Literature DB >> 22611658

The World Health Organization and public health research and practice in tuberculosis in India.

Debabar Banerji1.   

Abstract

Two major research studies carried out in India fundamentally affected tuberculosis treatment practices worldwide. One study demonstrated that home treatment of the disease is as efficacious as sanatorium treatment. The other showed that BCG vaccination is of little protective value from a public health viewpoint. India had brought together an interdisciplinary team at the National Tuberculosis Institute (NTI) with a mandate to formulate a nationally applicable, socially acceptable, and epidemiologically sound National Tuberculosis Programme (NTP). Work at the NTI laid the foundation for developing an operational research approach to dealing with tuberculosis as a public health problem. The starting point for this was not operational research as enunciated by experts in this field; rather, the NTI achieved operational research by starting from the people. This approach was enthusiastically welcomed by the World Health Organization's Expert Committee on Tuberculosis of 1964. The NTP was designed to "sink or sail with the general health services of the country." The program was dealt a major blow when, starting in 1967, a virtual hysteria was worked up to mobilize most of the health services for imposing birth control on the people. Another blow to the general health services occurred when the WHO joined the rich countries in instituting a number of vertical programs called "Global Initiatives". An ill-conceived, ill-designed, and ill-managed Global Programme for Tuberculosis was one outcome. The WHO has shown rank public health incompetence in taking a very casual approach to operational research and has been downright quixotic in its thinking on controlling tuberculosis worldwide.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22611658     DOI: 10.2190/HS.42.2.k

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Health Serv        ISSN: 0020-7314            Impact factor:   1.663


  2 in total

1.  Tuberculosis vaccine with high predicted population coverage and compatibility with modern diagnostics.

Authors:  Niels Peter H Knudsen; Sara Nørskov-Lauritsen; Gregory M Dolganov; Gary K Schoolnik; Thomas Lindenstrøm; Peter Andersen; Else Marie Agger; Claus Aagaard
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-01-06       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Knowledge translation for public health in low- and middle- income countries: a critical interpretive synthesis.

Authors:  Catherine Malla; Paul Aylward; Paul Ward
Journal:  Glob Health Res Policy       Date:  2018-10-22
  2 in total

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