The civil society initiative, led by the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (The Union) and World Vision India (WVI), in close collaboration with the Government of India, will manage Project Axshya in 300 districts across 21 states with a population of 577 million to control TB population, and WVI in 74 districts across seven states, five states being common to both principal partners.
Supported by one of the largest grants from the global fund to fight AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria (the Global Fund), Project Axshya a five-year project was launched last year with a focus on engaging civil society to improve the reach and effectiveness of India’s revised national tuberculosis control programme in 374 districts across 23 Indian states, reaching some 744 million people by 2015.
“The logistics of Project Axshya sound daunting, but the idea is to extend the impact of our efforts by building new stronger networks for TB control,” informed Dr Nevin Wilson, regional director, The Union South-East Asia Office. “For The Union, we have put in place a good team and are partnering with nine organisations, each with an excellent track record of working with populations in their respective states. This is the core group, but many more will be involved.”
Dr Geetanjali Sharma, of the Union South-East Asia Office informed that one of the main strategy of Project Axshya is to involve partners across sectors government, non-governmental organisations, private doctors, technical agencies, affected communities and the media. The project will also focus on the need to recognise and address linkages that continue to sustain TB as a mammoth challenge for India, especially the linkages with poverty and malnutrition, with diseases like diabetes and HIV, and with the use of tobacco.
“Our national TB control programme has done an outstanding job, but, with about two million new cases of TB each year, it is now recognised that TB in India cannot be successfully addressed by the government alone. Multiple stakeholders across sectors need to work together to expand access to information and services, increase accountability and truly empower communities. This is what Project Axshya seeks to do,” points out Dr Wilson.
A special focus of Project Axshya will be to focus on those who have had the greatest difficulty accessing information and treatment for TB especially women, children, tribal populations, communities living in geographically difficult areas, and vulnerable groups such as people co-infected with TB and HIV. The Union is also simultaneously strengthening work on the linkages that interface with TB.
He added that addressing the linkages of TB with poverty and with Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), and expanding partnerships across sectors, are not just wishful thoughts for them but that they have set up concrete mechanisms that they hope will feed into Project Axshya very usefully.
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