Gujarat Nears TB Detection Target, Achieves Over 91% Recovery Rate

Gujarat has achieved 94% of its tuberculosis detection target for 2025, registering over 1.31 lakh patients against a goal of 1.40 lakh. The state recorded a high clinical recovery rate of 91.74%, with most registered patients completing their treatment. Significant financial support was provided, with Rs 49.10 crore disbursed to nearly 93,000 patients under the Nikshay Poshan Yojana. A massive screening campaign reached over 75 lakh people, identifying more than 1.63 lakh new cases for treatment.

Key Points: Gujarat TB Elimination: 94% Detection, 91.74% Recovery Rate

  • 94% TB detection target achieved
  • 91.74% clinical recovery rate recorded
  • Rs 49.10 crore aid to 92,921 patients
  • 75.39 lakh people screened in intensive drive
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Gujarat meets TB detection target: Over 91 pc recovery rate under national elimination drive

Gujarat achieves 94% TB detection target with 91.74% recovery rate. Over Rs 49 crore disbursed to patients and 75 lakh people screened in 100-day drive.

"TB is a disease that requires prolonged treatment. As a result, patients often discontinue treatment midway due to financial burden. - State Officials"

Gandhinagar, March 23

Gujarat has achieved 94 per cent of its tuberculosis detection target set by NITI Aayog and recorded a clinical recovery rate of 91.74 per cent, according to data released by the state health department ahead of World TB Day.

Highlighting its progress in the National TB Elimination Campaign, officials said that the state identified and registered 1,31,801 tuberculosis patients in 2025 against a target of 1,40,000.

Of these, 1,25,301 patients were placed under active treatment, and 1,21,912 completed their treatment following continuous medical follow-up.

The government said the progress reflects ongoing efforts aligned with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's vision of a 'TB-Free India'.

"Under Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel, the state has worked towards meeting targets related to TB registration and treatment," officials noted.

Highlighting the challenges associated with long-duration treatment, the government said, "TB is a disease that requires prolonged treatment. As a result, patients often discontinue treatment midway due to financial burden."

It added that, to address this, financial assistance was provided to support patients throughout treatment.

In 2025, a total of Rs 49.10 crore was disbursed to 92,921 TB patients under the 'Nikshay Poshan Yojana', which provides each patient with Rs 1,000 per month to ensure adequate nutrition during treatment.

The state has also integrated community participation into its programme.

In this regard, the government said, "Gujarat has successfully linked healthcare support with public participation."

A total of 31,058 'Nikshay Mitras', comprising community volunteers and sponsors, have been registered on the national portal, of whom 10,682 are active.

These volunteers have distributed more than 4.49 lakh nutrition kits to patients.

Alongside treatment and support measures, the state has carried out large-scale screening as part of the central government's 100-day intensive TB elimination campaign launched in December 2024.

The government said, "Leading the '100-day Intensive TB Elimination Campaign', the state carried out large-scale door-to-door screening."

As of March 20, 75.39 lakh people have been screened for tuberculosis in Gujarat.

The exercise led to the identification of 1,63,426 new cases, which have been brought under active treatment.

Officials said early identification through proactive screening has enabled patients to be linked to treatment before the disease becomes severe or spreads further within communities, contributing to improved outcomes under the campaign.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great progress, but we must not be complacent. 94% detection means we are still missing 6% of the target patients. TB is a silent killer in many rural and tribal areas. The door-to-door screening is a good step, but needs to be sustained year-round.
A
Aman W
The community volunteer model with 'Nikshay Mitras' is brilliant. When local people get involved, stigma reduces and treatment adherence improves. Hope other states learn from Gujarat's public participation approach. Jai Hind!
S
Sarah B
As someone who has seen a family member battle TB, I know how tough the journey is. The financial and nutritional support is crucial. Screening 75 lakh people is a massive logistical achievement. This gives real hope for a TB-Free India.
K
Karthik V
While the numbers look good on paper, I hope the data is accurate and includes patients from all socio-economic backgrounds, especially migrant workers and urban poor. Sometimes success stories don't reflect the ground reality in slums. Just a respectful caution.
N
Nisha Z
The 100-day campaign seems to have yielded results! Identifying over 1.6 lakh new cases through screening is huge. Early detection saves lives and stops transmission. More power to the health workers doing this tough door-to-door work. 🙏

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