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Method
of Calculation
Every
quarter, every RNTCP district in the country reports every patient placed on
treatment. The numbers correlate with the entries made in Tuberculosis
Registers.
As on 31st December 2009, the
total number of patients who had been treated under the RNTCP
was 11,045,051.
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Patients Treated |
To
obtain the estimated number of patients treated on any particular day, it is
assumed that the number treated in the current quarter is no less than the
number treated in the previous quarter. This is a conservative assumption,
since the RNTCP continues to expand, and because case detection rates are
increasing.
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Lives Saved |
To estimate the number
of lives saved, best available data from both the RNTCP and the NTP are used. A
systematic evaluation of outcomes in the NTP indicated that 29% of the
smear-positive patients died (Datta M, Radhamani MP, Selvaraj R, et al.
Critical assessment of smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis patients after
chemotherapy under the district tuberculosis programme Tubercle and Lung Dis
1993;74:180-186). Data from the National Tuberculosis Institute, Bangalore and
the Tuberculosis Research Center, Chennai suggest that approximately 10%-12% of
smear-negative patients die under programme conditions in the NTP. In the
RNTCP, no more than 4% of all patients die. Thus, taking a weighted average of
smear-positive and smear-negative patients, the differential mortality is at
least 18%. That is, for every hundred patients treated under the RNTCP, at
least eighteen lives are saved.
This is, however, a
conservative estimate for the following reasons:
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As
there was no short course chemotherapy previously in many areas where the RNTCP
is being implemented, the differential increase in survival would be much
greater.
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It is
assumed that every patient treated under the RNTCP would have been treated
under the NTP. The detection rate of smear-positive patients under the RNTCP,
however, is nearly twice that of the NTP. Therefore, substantially more
patients who have serious tuberculosis are being accurately diagnosed and
appropriately treated under the RNTCP.
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Secondary
cases, in whom tuberculosis develops because of its continued spread in areas
not implementing the RNTCP, are not accounted for. Prevention of secondary
cases because of higher cure rates would further increase the number of lives
saved under the RNTCP.
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