Trachoma

June 30, 2025

Recently, in the ‘Mann Ki Baat’ programme, the Prime Minister of India said that India has been declared free of Trachoma — an eye disease.

About Trachoma:

  • It is a bacterial infection caused by the bacterium Chlamydia Trachomatis which affects the eyes.
  • How does it spread?
    • It is contagious; spreading through contact with the eyes, eyelids, nose or throat secretions of infected people, if left untreated it causes irreversible blindness.
    • It is found in communities who are living in poor environmental conditions.
    • The World Health Organisation (WHO) has termed Trachoma as a neglected tropical disease and its estimation suggests that 150 million people worldwide are affected by Trachoma.
  • Initiatives of Government of India
    • The Government of India launched the National Trachoma Control Program in 1963 and later on Trachoma control efforts were integrated into India’s National Program for Control of Blindness (NPCB).
    • As a result, in 2017, India was declared free from infectious However, surveillance continued for trachoma cases in all the districts of India from 2019 onwards till 2024.
    • The National Trachomatous Trichiasis (TT only) Survey was also carried out in 200 endemic districts of the country under National Programme for Control of Blindness & Visual Impairment (NPCBVI) from 2021-24, which was a mandate set by WHO in order to declare that India has eliminated Trachoma as a public health problem.
    • To eliminate trachoma as a public health problem, WHO recommends the SAFE strategy.
    • The SAFE strategy includes: Surgery to treat the blinding stage (trachomatous trichiasis); Antibiotics to clear the infection, particularly the antibiotic azithromycin; Facial cleanliness and Environmental improvement, particularly improving access to water and sanitation.

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