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Healthcare pushed out by the pandemic

All eyes have been on coronavirus and effort diverted to fight the pandemic. But other global killers like tuberculosis, measles, HIV/Aids and cancer are now set to surge.

As all eyes have been on the virus, other serious killer diseases took a backseat.
Resources and staff were diverted, lockdowns were common all over the world and a very real fear of Covid-19 kept people away from clinics and hospitals.

Claudia Hammond and her expert panel from Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America look at the devastating impact of the pandemic on illnesses other than Covid, on global killers like tuberculosis, polio, measles and HIV/Aids.

And they hear that the worldwide disruption to cancer care will inevitably lead to late diagnoses, late-stage cancer treatment and more deaths.

Dr Ramya Ananthakrishnan runs REACH, which supports, cares for and organises treatment for TB patients in Chennai, India’s fourth most populous city. She tells Claudia about how hard the pandemic hit the work they do.

Claudia’s guests include Dr Abeeba Kamarulzaman, Professor of Medicine and Infectious Diseases at the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and the President of the International Aids Society; Dr Lucica Ditiu, respiratory physician originally from Romania, Executive Director of the Stop TB Partnership, Geneva, Switzerland; Dr Balcha Masresha, coordinator of the measles and rubella programmes for the World Health Organisation in Brazzaville, Congo and cancer physician Dr Carlos Barrios, Director of the Latin American Clinical Oncology Research Group from Brazil.

Producer: Fiona Hill and Maria Simons
Studio Engineer: Bob Nettles

(Image: Sputum culture, Credit: Steve Gschmeissner/Science Photo Library/Getty Images)

Available now

50 minutes

Broadcasts

  • Sat 27 Nov 2021 19:06GMT
  • Sat 27 Nov 2021 20:06GMT
  • Sun 28 Nov 2021 12:06GMT