| Literature DB >> 27350969 |
Ghose Bishwajit1, Seydou Ide2, Sharmistha Ghosh3.
Abstract
South Asian countries have developed infectious disease control programs such as routine immunization, vaccination, and the provision of essential drugs which are operating nationwide in cooperation with many local and foreign NGOs. Most South Asian countries have a relatively low prevalence of HIV/AIDS until now, but issues like poverty, food insecurity, illiteracy, poor sanitation, and social stigma around AIDS are widespread and are creating formidable challenges to prevention of further spread of this epidemic. Besides that, resurgence of tuberculosis along with the emergence of the drug resistant (MDR-TB and XDRTB) strains and the coepidemic of TB and HIV are posing ever-growing threats to the underdeveloped healthcare infrastructure. The countries are undergoing an epidemiological transition where the disease burden is gradually shifting to noncommunicable diseases, but the infectious diseases still account for almost half of the total disease burden. Despite this huge burden of infectious diseases in South Asia, which is second only to Africa, there is yet any study on the social determinants of infectious diseases in a local context. This paper examines various issues surrounding the social determinants of infectious diseases in South Asian countries with a special reference to HIV and tuberculosis. And, by doing so, it attempts to provide a framework for formulating more efficient prevention and intervention strategies for the future.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 27350969 PMCID: PMC4897585 DOI: 10.1155/2014/135243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Sch Res Notices ISSN: 2356-7872
Figure 1South Asia poverty dynamics. Figure 1 shows the trend of total population and population living below poverty line in South Asia. Though the incidence of poverty is decreasing slowly since 1995, it still remains noticeably high. Source: World Bank poverty database and Global Poverty Statistics.
Comparison of total number of deaths attributable to risk factors between high-income countries and low-and-middle income countries (LMICs) in 2001. It is clear that, in LMICs, people are more at risk of dying from the causes which are influenced by lower socioeconomic status and lack of awareness about these diseases.
| Risk factor | LMICs | High-income countries | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total number of deaths | Percent | Total number of deaths | Percent | |
| Childhood underweight | 3,630 | 7.5 | 0 | 0 |
| Poor sanitation and unclean water | 1,563 | 3.2 | 4 | <0.1 |
| Smoking | 3,340 | 6.9 | 1,462 | 18.5 |
| Unsafe sex | 2,819 | 5.8 | 32 | 0.4 |
| Contaminated injections | 407 | 0.8 | 4 | <0.1 |
Source: Global Disease Burden, 2001.
Total number and percentages of deaths in low-and-middle income countries (LMICs) caused by five major infectious diseases.
| Causes of deaths | LMICs | High-income countries | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total number of deaths | Percent | Total number of deaths | Percent | |
| Tuberculosis | 1,590 | 3.3 | 16 | 0.2 |
| HIV/AIDS | 2,552 | 5.3 | 22 | 0.3 |
| Diarrhea | 1,777 | 3.7 | 6 | <0.1 |
| Measles | 762 | 1.6 | 1 | <0.1 |
| Malaria | 1,207 | 2.5 | 0 | 0 |
Source: Global Disease Burden, 2001.
Figure 2Incidence of TB per 1000 population. Figure 2 illustrates that incidence of TB is remarkably lower in the developed countries like USA and Japan than in the third world countries like in South Asia. India and Bangladesh have one of the highest incidence rates of TB in the world. Source: World Health Statistics and Global Disease Burden.
Selection of studies demonstrating the influence of poverty on tuberculosis.
| Study title | Reference | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Tuberculosis and poverty | Spence et al. [ | Tuberculosis remains strongly associated with poverty |
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| Tuberculosis and poverty: why are the poor at greater risk in India? | Oxlade et al. [ | TB control strategies should be targeted to the poorest populations that are most at risk and should address the most important determinants of disease |
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| Cash transfer and microfinance interventions can positively impact TB risk factors | Boccia et al. [ | Cash transfer and microfinance interventions can positively impact TB risk factors |
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| The Innovative Socioeconomic Interventions Against Tuberculosis (ISIAT) project: an operational assessment | Rocha et al. [ | The Innovative Socioeconomic Interventions Against Tuberculosis (ISIAT) project: an operational assessment |
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| The economic burden of tuberculosis care for patients and households in Africa: a systematic review | Ukwaja et al. [ | The average patient's/household's prediagnostic costs for TB care were catastrophic |
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| Addressing poverty through disease control programmes: examples from tuberculosis control in India | Kamineni et al. [ | Further in-depth analysis as well as systems/policy/operations research exploring pro-poor initiatives, in particular examining service delivery synergies between existing poverty alleviation schemes and TB control programme, is essential |
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| The association between household poverty rates and tuberculosis case notification rates | Wong et al. [ | There is a positive association between household poverty rates and sputum-positive TB |
Figure 3Prevalence of HIV among adults aged 15–49. Figure 3 shows that Pakistan had about 130,000 cases of HIV in 2011 which is the highest in the history of the country. Nepal and Sri Lanka have relatively lower incidence of HIV comparing to Pakistan and Bangladesh. Source: adapted from World Health Statistics.
Strategies proposed by WHO to address the social determinants of NTDs.
| Number | Social determinants | Strategies |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Potable water and sanitation | Identifying the links between social determinants of access to water and sanitation in regard to NTDs |
| 2 | Environmental factors | Showing the impact of environmental variables on NTDs |
| 3 | Health service for migrating populations | Making better policies to reduce the vulnerability of migrant labors, nomads, refugees, and disaster victims to NTDs |
| 4 | Sociocultural and gender inequality | Identifying sociocultural factors that lead to unequal access to NTDs treatment |
| 5 | Poverty | Poverty alleviation as a strategy to reduce the incidence of NTDs |
| 6 | Risk assessment and surveillance | Establishing cross-disciplinary risk assessment, surveillance systems, early warning, data accumulation, and long term planning |
Figure 4The nexus between the social determinants and the infectious disease. Four main social determinants of the infectious diseases are shown in the red letters.