Establishment and development of the National Tuberculosis Control Programme in Vietnam

Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2005 Feb;9(2):151-6.

Abstract

Objective: To describe the establishment and development of the National Tuberculosis Control Programme (NTP) of Vietnam.

Methods: Data were obtained from the surveillance system established by the new NTP in 1986 and based on the principles now described as the WHO DOTS strategy.

Results: The proportion of districts covered by the NTP increased from 40% in 1986 to almost 100% in 2000. The proportion of communes applying NTP guidelines increased from 18% in 1986 to 99.8% in 2000. The total number of tuberculosis cases notified increased from 8737 in 1986 to 89 792 in 2000. Most of these are new smear-positive cases. Based on WHO estimations of the incidence rate, the proportion of new smear-positive cases detected and put on short-course treatment has been over 70% since 1996. Reported cure rates with short-course chemotherapy are consistently over 85%.

Conclusions: DOTS is feasible in a low-income, high-burden country. The main reasons for success were political commitment, a well-functioning health network, integration of tuberculosis control into the general health service at district level, a continuous supply of drugs and effective external support. Major challenges are long-term financial support, expansion to remote areas and vulnerable groups, definition of the role of the private sector, and future developments of the HIV epidemic and multidrug resistance.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • National Health Programs* / organization & administration
  • Tuberculosis / epidemiology
  • Tuberculosis / prevention & control*
  • Vietnam / epidemiology