India's TB Battle: 21% Drop in Cases Amid Global Health Success Story

India has made remarkable progress in fighting tuberculosis with cases dropping significantly over the past decade. The country's innovative approach includes widespread screening and advanced diagnostic technology. Nutritional support programs and community engagement have been crucial to this success. These efforts position India closer to achieving its goal of becoming TB-free.

Key Points: India TB Incidence Drops 21% as Treatment Coverage Surges

  • TB incidence dropped from 237 to 187 per lakh population since 2015
  • Treatment coverage surged to 92% with 26.18 lakh patients diagnosed
  • TB Mukt Bharat screened 19 crore people, detecting 24.5 lakh cases
  • Nutritional support increased to Rs 1000 monthly per patient via DBT
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TB incidence in India drops by 21% from 237 per lakh population in 2015 to 187 per lakh population in 2024: Report

India achieves 21% reduction in TB cases from 2015-2024, outpacing global decline with 92% treatment coverage and expanded nutritional support programs.

"This is one of the highest declines in TB incidence globally - Ministry of Health and Family Welfare"

New Delhi, November 12

India's TB incidence (new cases emerging each year) reduced by 21% - from 237 per lakh population in 2015 to 187 per lakh population in 2024 - over almost double the pace of the decline observed globally at 12 %, as per the World Health Organization's Global TB Report 2025, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare said in an official statement.

This is one of the highest declines in TB incidence globally, outpacing reductions noted among other high-burden countries.

India's innovative case finding approach, driven by the swift uptake of newer technologies, decentralization of services and large scale community mobilization, has led to the country's treatment coverage to surge to over 92% in 2024, from 53% in 2015 - with 26.18 lakh TB patients being diagnosed in 2024, out of an estimated incidence of 27 lakh cases, as per the release.

This has helped reduce the number of "missing cases" - those who had TB but were not reported to the programme - from an estimated 15 lakhs in 2015 to less than one lakh in 2024. Also there is no significant increase in the number of MDR TB patients in the country. Treatment success rate under the TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyan increases to 90%, ahead of global treatment success rate of 88%.

Similarly, India's TB mortality rate has decreased from 28 per lakh population in 2015 to 21 per lakh population in 2024, reflecting significant progress in reducing deaths due to TB. This progress has been achieved through strong government commitment evidenced by a historic near-ten-fold increase in government funding to the TB programme over last 09 years.

Since its launch in December 2024, India's flagship TB elimination mission, the TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyan has achieved extensive reach, screening over 19 crore vulnerable individuals for TB across the country leading to the detection of over 24.5 lakh TB patients, including 8.61 lakh asymptomatic TB cases. This proactive approach draws on both global and local evidence underscoring the prevalence of asymptomatic (sub-clinical) TB in high-burden settings.

India's commitment to early detection is backed by the largest TB laboratory network in the world, comprising 9391 rapid molecular testing facilities and 107 culture & drug susceptibility testing laboratories. In addition, to bolster community screening efforts, over 500 AI-enabled hand-held chest x-ray units are available across the country, with an additional 1,500 machines being delivered to the States/UTs. Through 1.78 lakh Ayushman Arogya Mandirs across the country, the programme has been able to decentralize services and take TB care closer to communities, it said.

The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has also expanded nutritional support provided to TB patients. The Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) under the Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana (NPY) was increased from Rs 500 to Rs 1000 per month per patient for the entire treatment duration. Since its launch in April 2018, Rs 4,406crores have been disbursed directly into the bank accounts of 1.37crore beneficiaries. Furthermore, to date, 6,77,541 individuals and organizations have enrolled as Ni-kshay Mitras and distributed over 45 lakh food baskets to TB patients, reflecting a strong and growing public-private-community partnership in India's fight against TB.

In a strong demonstration of whole-of-society engagement, the Ministry has also harnessed the energy of over 2 lakh youth volunteers to strengthen community participation in the fight against TB. Over 2 lakh My Bharat volunteers have come forward to serve as Ni-kshay Mitras, providing psychosocial support and encouragement to TB patients across the country. This vibrant youth-led movement reflects India's commitment to making TB elimination a people's movement and ensuring that no patient feels alone on their journey to recovery.

The Ministry has also scaled up a differentiated TB care approach across the country, whereby high risk TB patients are identified based on clinical parameters and presence of co-morbidities that impact treatment outcomes and are accordingly provided individualised and tailored treatment to ensure recovery. Also the ASHA workers have been trained to identify early warning signs in TB patients in their areas for reffering the TB patients immedialy to higher treatment facilities.

Looking ahead, the TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyan will continue to focus on pro-actively screening all vulnerable population including asymptomatics & individuals in congregate settings through hand-held X-rays, early detection of all patients using upfront molecular diagnostics and providing them with comprehensive high-quality care - treatment, nutritional and psychosocial support to ensure full recovery and prevention of community transmission. This integrated approach will further reduce TB incidence and mortality, bringing the country closer to the goal of a TB-Mukt Bharat, the release stated.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As someone who lost a family member to TB years ago, this progress brings tears to my eyes. The community mobilization and youth volunteers are making a real difference. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
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Arjun K
Impressive numbers but I hope this reaches the rural areas equally. Sometimes government schemes work well in cities but villages get left behind. The ASHA workers deserve more recognition for their hard work.
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Sarah B
The use of AI-enabled X-ray units and 9391 testing facilities is remarkable! India is showing the world how technology can transform public health. The 90% treatment success rate beating global average is commendable.
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Vikram M
From 15 lakh missing cases to less than 1 lakh - this is the real achievement! Early detection and community screening are key. The Ni-kshay Mitras program shows how public-private partnership can work wonders.
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Michael C
While the progress is impressive, I hope the government maintains this momentum. TB elimination requires sustained effort over years. The funding increase is good but we need to ensure it reaches the grassroots properly.
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Ananya R
The focus on asymptomatic cases is brilliant! So many people carry TB without knowing and spread it unknowingly. Screening 19 crore people is massive! This is how we'll

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