Vietnam can treat all drug-resistant forms of TB: health official

Vietnam can treat all drug-resistant forms of TB: health official hinh anh 1Illustrative photo (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnam is now able to treat all strains of
multi-drug-resistant and totally drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) with
short-term treatment regimens using newly accessible drugs.

The
information was released by Associate Prof. Dr. Nguyen Viet Nhung, head of the
National TB Prevention Programme, during his meeting with Dr. Tereza
Kasaeva, Director of the World
Health Organisation’s (WHO) Global TB Programme, in Hanoi on July 24.

Nhung, who is also Director
of the , said the National
TB Prevention Programme expects to admit some 3,420 patients suffering from drug-resistant
TB in 2018, with another 4,050 in 2019, and 4,680 in 2020. The programme looks
to cover all in the future in order to control the
spread of the disease in the community.

The official told his guest
that new technologies, drugs, and treatment methods have been used effectively
in TB treatment in Vietnam.

Besides this, 50 specialised
hospitals, and domestic and foreign partners have created a strong TB
prevention and control network in the country, he stressed.

According to the official,
Vietnam ranks 16th among the top 30 countries for total TB patients, and 13th
in the rankings of drug-resistant TB patients.

There were an estimated 126,000 new TB cases and about 13,000 deaths due
to TB in Vietnam in 2017, which was down from the 16,000 deaths in 2016, said Nhung,
citing from a report released by the WHO.

However, the fatality rate still remains drastically high, even when
compared to traffic accident deaths, he said, adding that around 5,500
Vietnamese people catch the drug-resistant strain of TB each year.

More than 100,000 TB patients are treated each year, with over 90
percent of new cases managing to beat the disease. Of note, more than 75
percent of the 5,827 drug-resistant TB cases in 2017 recovered from the
disease, higher than the global rate of 52 percent, Nhung said.

For her part, Kasaeva suggested Vietnam invest more in its strategy against TB and
conduct research studies and innovations in this field, expressing her hope
that Vietnam could become a pioneer in establishing a TB research network in
the region.

During their working visit
to Vietnam from July 24-27, Kasaeva and her entourage are scheduled to have
working sessions with centrally-run Vietnamese agencies on TB prevention.

They will also visit the
National Lung Hospital, the Hanoi Lung Hospital, the Hai Phong Lung and TB
Hospital, and several medical centres in the districts and communes of Hanoi
and Hai Phong.–VNA

VNA

Source: VietnamPlus

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