Part of: Mains GS Paper III- Indian Economy
Key pointers:
Article link: Click here
TOPIC: General Studies 3:
- Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Health, Education, Human Resources
- Issues relating to poverty and hunger
- Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability, e-governance- applications, models, successes, limitations, and potential; citizens charters, transparency & accountability and institutional and other measures
Outsmarting Tuberculosis
Background:
The incidence rate of tuberculosis (TB) in India is estimated at 200-300 cases per 100,000 population per year. As a comparison, in western Europe it is five per 100,000 per year. India’s estimated annual TB burden is 28 lakh, 27% of the global total; our population is only 18%. Every day 1,200 Indians die of TB — 10 every three minutes. The tragedy 1,200 families face every day is beyond imagination. No other disease or calamity has such Himalayan magnitude. We have become the TB capital of the world.
Infection with TB bacilli is the necessary cause of TB. Cough and blood in sputum occur only in lung TB. TB can affect the lungs, brain, bones, joints, the liver, intestines or for that matter any organ and can progress slowly or kill in weeks.
Three processes: infection, progression, transmission
Infection: Infection occurs when TB bacilli are inhaled. Bacilli may stay in the lungs or travel to other organs. Infection is lifelong, with bacilli lying dormant. This phase is “latent TB”, diagnosed by a tuberculin skin test (TST). The “annual rate of TB infection” (ARTI) is about 1%. Cumulatively, 40% to 70% of us are living with latent TB. From this reservoir pool, a few progress to TB disease, one by one, 5-30 years, average 20 years, later.
Progression: Progression occurs when bacilli become active, multiply and cause pathology; now we have “active TB”.
Transmission: When active TB affects the lungs, the bacilli find an exit route to the atmosphere, necessary for transmission.
Way ahead:
Conclusion:
To outsmart TB bacilli, we must intercept infection, progression and transmission. What is needed is the concerted use of all interventions — biomedical and socio-behavioural. Any further delay may convert a controllable disease into an uncontrollable one, because of increasing frequency of resistance to drugs against TB.
Connecting the dots:
TOPIC:
General Studies 2:
General Studies 3:
Background:
There is no debate that advances in artificial intelligence and automation will effect profound changes in our world. There are growing concerns, or more specifically outright fears, amongst the working age population regarding the effect of technologies like AI on jobs in future, and with good reason.
Challenge:
Old fears:
History has demonstrated that every technological shift, while eliminating certain types of jobs, has ultimately ended up creating more. Besides, at a broader level, these technologies always have had the power to solve some of the great problems of mankind. For instance, AI is already driving great advances in medicine and healthcare with perfectly accurate diagnosis and far better disease prevention.
Today, as we stand on the edge of a technological transformation which is evolving at an exponential speed, the same lookout seems quite natural although despite these concerns and fears.
Issue:
An economic scenario where there is high unemployment consisting of individuals incapable of getting a job simply because they do not possess the required skills can become a reality if India doesn’t prepare adequately for the future of jobs.
Preparing ourselves:
Conclusion:
More efforts should be made to strengthen the focus on how to mend our higher education ecosystem altogether. Our employees need not compete with technology that can disrupt almost every other industry. Instead, it would be more meaningful to leverage synergetic complementarity between the two.
Connecting the dots:
The self-binding Russia prism
Marching against apathy