Tuberculosis & Gender Inequality in India

  • India accounts for over 25% of global TB burden, with 2.7 million cases and >3 lakh deaths (2024), yet women face disproportionate social and systemic barriers across diagnosis, treatment, and recovery.
  • Despite women constituting 35% of TB cases (WHO 2025), their challenges remain under-recognised, as gendered stigma, delayed care, and limited autonomy distort the true disease burden.

Relevance

  • GS 1 (Society):
    • Gender inequality, stigma, health access
  • GS 3 (Economy & Health):
    • Human capital loss, nutrition linkages

Practice Question

Q. “Tuberculosis in India is not just a medical issue but a gendered social crisis.” Examine.(250 Words)

  • India achieved a 21% decline in TB incidence (2015–2024), nearly double the global average, reflecting progress under National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP).
  • However, male-to-female ratio in bacteriologically confirmed TB is 3:1, indicating diagnostic bias and under-detection among women.
  • Extrapulmonary TB (EPTB) constitutes 24% of cases (2023) and is more common in women, often leading to missed or delayed diagnosis due to atypical symptoms.
  • Undernutrition remains the leading comorbidity, significantly increasing TB vulnerability, especially among adolescent girls and women of reproductive age.
  • Article 21 (Right to life & health) includes access to timely diagnosis, treatment, and dignity; TB-related stigma and exclusion violate this fundamental right.
  • Article 14 & 15 mandate equality and prohibit gender discrimination, yet systemic barriers in healthcare access reflect de facto inequality.
  • India’s commitment to SDG 3 (End TB by 2030) and CEDAW obligations require gender-responsive healthcare policies addressing women’s specific vulnerabilities.
  • Policies like National Strategic Plan for TB Elimination (2017–25) recognise gender concerns, but implementation gaps persist.
  • Women face restricted mobility and financial dependence, limiting their ability to seek timely diagnosis and treatment, especially in rural and patriarchal settings.
  • Healthcare systems often rely on symptom-based screening, which fails to detect TB in women due to non-classical presentations (fatigue, mild fever).
  • Diagnostic infrastructure gaps:
    • EPTB diagnosis largely confined to tertiary centres
    • Limited training of frontline workers on gender-specific symptoms
  • Government initiatives:
    • TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan (2024) using AI-based chest X-rays
    • However, focus remains largely on high-risk groups, not gender-specific barriers
  • TB stigma disproportionately affects women, leading to social isolation, broken marriages, and reduced marriage prospects, as seen in multiple survivor testimonies.
  • Women often hide symptoms due to fear of stigma, resulting in late diagnosis and higher morbidity.
  • Ethical issue of “double burden”:
    • Disease burden + social discrimination
    • Violates principles of dignity, autonomy, and social justice
  • Gender norms force women to continue household work during illness, worsening health outcomes and delaying recovery.
  • Women experience atypical TB symptoms, leading to higher chances of misdiagnosis or clinical (non-confirmatory) diagnosis, reducing treatment accuracy.
  • Extrapulmonary TB (genital TB) causes infertility and menstrual irregularities, often misdiagnosed, affecting reproductive health and social status.
  • Delayed diagnosis increases risk of:
    • MDR-TB (drug-resistant TB)
    • Severe complications like lung damage or loss (case example: Meera Yadav)
  • Post-TB lung disease (PTLD) affects nearly 50% survivors, causing chronic respiratory issues and long-term morbidity.
  • TB imposes high out-of-pocket expenditure, and women’s limited financial autonomy restricts access to timely care.
  • Loss of productivity due to TB disproportionately affects women engaged in informal and unpaid labour, which remains unrecognised economically.
  • Social abandonment leads to economic vulnerability, pushing women into cycles of poverty and ill-health.
  • Investment in TB care yields high returns by improving labour productivity and reducing long-term healthcare costs.
  • Undernutrition + anaemia weaken immunity, increasing TB susceptibility among women.
  • Limited decision-making power delays healthcare-seeking behaviour.
  • Low awareness levels about TB symptoms and treatment options exacerbate delays.
  • Intersectionality:
    • Rural women, tribal populations, and urban poor face multiple overlapping disadvantages.
  • Diagnostic bias: Women less likely to receive bacteriological confirmation, leading to underreporting and mismanagement.
  • Healthcare access barriers:
    • Mobility restrictions
    • Lack of female-friendly health infrastructure
  • Stigma-driven non-disclosure, leading to treatment interruptions and disease spread.
  • Weak integration of mental health support, despite high psychological trauma among TB-affected women.
  • Limited community engagement and survivor participation in programme implementation.
  • Adopt a gender-responsive TB strategy, integrating screening, diagnosis, and treatment with women’s health programmes across lifecycle stages.
  • Strengthen active case finding, especially for women, using community health workers and targeted outreach in high-burden areas.
  • Expand access to diagnostic facilities for EPTB, including decentralisation beyond tertiary centres.
  • Provide nutritional and financial support (DBT schemes) tailored for women to address underlying vulnerabilities.
  • Integrate mental health and psychosocial support, leveraging TB survivor networks for counselling and stigma reduction.
  • Enhance capacity building of healthcare providers on gender-specific TB manifestations and management.
  • Promote awareness campaigns addressing stigma, focusing on families and communities to change social attitudes.
  • India contributes ~25% of global TB cases (WHO Global TB Report 2025).
  • Extrapulmonary TB (EPTB): TB affecting organs other than lungs; constitutes ~24% cases in India.
  • Undernutrition is the leading risk factor for TB in India.
  • TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan (2024) uses AI-based screening tools.

Book a Free Demo Class

March 2026
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  
Categories

Get free Counselling and ₹25,000 Discount

Fill the form – Our experts will call you within 30 mins.