Panaji: 15 Per Cent New Leprosy Patients are Children: Study


By Our Special correspondent
Daijiworld Media Network - Panaji
 
Panaji, Jun 25:
Despite the fact that leprosy was officially eradicated from state ever since December 2006, more than 15 per cent of the new leprosy cases perceived in Goa are children, the health officials conceded.

"It is alarming that 15.38 per cent of total cases reported in Goa are that of children," state health secretary Sanjiv Srivastava said today.

He was addressing a seminar at state secreatariate on Eradication of Leprosy organised by state directorate of health services.

"We want that detection of leprosy should be done at early stage so that it can be controlled without disfiguring the body," Srivastava said.

According to official records, officially Goa achieved leprosy elimination in December 2006, almost a year after neighbouring states of Maharashtra and Karnataka achieved the feet.

"The general health care system in Goa doing best to sustain the elimination achieved in December 2006. The present prevalence rate is 0.57 out of 10,000 population," Dr M Mohandas, chief medical officer, directorate of health services, said.

He stated that 112 new leprosy cases were detected in the year 2008.

The national leprosy eradication programme implemented in Goa has found five clusters as a high risk areas which includes Taleigao, Vasco, Quepem, Chimbel and Ponda, where the average leprosy detection rate is more.

"We will be holding special skin care camps in these areas," Dr Mohandas informed the seminar.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Dr. Cajetan Coelho, Goa, India

    Sat, Jun 27 2009

    The six decades old "Trace and Treat Campaign" of Team Baba Amte in Anandwan has been a milestone in the eradication and elimination of leprosy in some of the districts of Maharashtra. Khandesh, Paschim Maharashtra, Marathwada, Dakshin Maharashtra and Vidarbha are all doing well. Chandrapur, Hinghanghat, Gadchiroli, Wardha, Yavatmal, Vaxim, Jalgaon, Akola, Buldana and Bhandara are experiencing days of comfort and joy.

    These regions have made visible progress in arresting the rise of leprosy by nipping it in the bud through their multipronged, systematic, dedicated and honest efforts. The Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Leprosy Foundations’s Archives in Wardha have well maintained reports on strategies and results for case studies carried out for the various segments of the Sewagram village and its environs, case studies for some villages in the districts of Andhra Pradesh, for West Bengal and Orissa. The success rate in eradication and elimination of leprosy for these areas is extraordinary. Thanks to the zealous efforts of GMLF, MSS Anandwan, Manohardam-Dattapur and Tapovan.

    Goa State health authorities need to deploy regiments of trained para-medical workers armed with the (SET) tool kits to areas like Taleigao, Vasco, Quepem, Chimbel and Ponda to carry out combing operations of the terrain. Early detection and speedy treatment are indeed the need of the hour. Cure will allow the children to grow without carrying the burden of stigma for the rest of their lives. I know of hundreds of cases who went in search of treatment only after they had lost parts of their bodies. Their challenged and battered spirits shine through those mutilated bodies that act like prisons restricting their scope for doing good on the Planet.

    Stigmatising, ostracising and marginalizing is something that happens in every Society all the time, no matter how egalitarian and democratic it may try to appear. We need to save these leprosy affected children from being shut out from participating in our nation building enterprise by providing them with correct and timely treatment. Leprosy is indeed curable and leprosy is not contagious is what we all should bear in mind all the time. Best wishes to Team Goa in its efforts to combat leprosy in our tiny State.

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