20 January 2012
Mumbai India
- 36 Drug-Resistant TB Cases In Last 40 Days
- Report Each TB Case To us, Says Health Dept
- Women End Up With TB By Inhaling Tobacco Dust
- Sale of Anti-TB Drugs Without Doctor’s Prescription Faces Ban
- Delhi Team Says It’s Not Incurable TB
- Govt Plans To Turn Sewri TB Hospital Into Centre Of Excellence
- Doctors press For Drug Policy Revamp
- Demand For Declaring TB Notifiable Disease Rises
- 400% Financial Push To Combat TB
- Arunachal Launches Scheme For TB Patients
- New TB Lab To Detect Drug Resistant Strain
- Docs Find Totally Drug-Resistant TB Strain In Mum Hosp
- Now, Test To Detect MDR TB In 2 hrs
- Rising ‘MDR-TB Cases’ Ring Alarm Bells
Two days after DNA highlighted the sorry state of affairs at Asia’s largest tuberculosis (TB) hospital at Sewri (TB hospital struggles, as do its patients), the state government on Thursday decided on an overhaul to make it a centre of excellence for TB management.
Dr P Gaikwad, joint director for tuberculosis from the state health department, said the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has been asked to renovate the Sewri TB Hospital at the earliest. “The state will help the corporation in making it the centre of excellence in tuberculosis management.”
The redevelopment plan includes a full-fledged laboratory with all modern equipment, added Dr Gaikwad.
The BMC has pegged the initial cost to begin the work at Rs40 lakh. “The state government will later reimburse the BMC,” said Dr Gaikwad.
On the cards is also the renovation of the operation theatres (OTs) at the hospital. On January 17, DNA had reported that the OTs are more or less shut and that only minor surgeries are now performed there.
“The surgery part has been neglected in treatment of TB . It has a definite place in treating multi-drug resistant (MDR) and extremely drug resistant (XDR) TB patients,” said Dr Gaikwad.
The last major operation at the hospital was performed in 2006. Admitting that there is a shortage of thoracic surgeons, Dr Gaikwad said such retired surgeons will be requested to help.
“We are asking two retired thoracic surgeons who now stay in Thane if they can come here. We will invite interested doctors to come and start surgeries under the guidance of these senior thoracic surgeons.”
A plan will be chalked out to convince those doctors who are not too keen on joining the hospital.




