Unseen Passage – CASE BASED -Class 11/12
Unseen Passage – CASE BASED – Passage -2
Read the following passage and answer the question below:
1 COVID and malaria affect the rich and poor alike and so make headlines. Many readers may not have heard of kala azar, a disease mainly prevalent in some of the poorest parts of India such as northern Bihar and Bengal. Spread by sand flies, kala azar blackens the skin-hence its name. It does not kill directly but weakens the immunological system so much that the patient becomes a victim of other infections that abound in poor regions. Untreated, it leads to death in95% of cases.
The good news is that cases of kala azar have crashed 98.7%, from 44,533 in 2007 to just 834 in
2022. Hopefully. It will be eradicated in a few years. Because kala azar is little known in urban
metros, the news has not made big headlines. But for those in some of the poorest parts of India,
where there are so many ways to die, there will be one less. India has already eradicated smallpox,
polio, and guinea worm. Kala azar could be the fourth disease to be eradicated.
2 The main way of controlling the sand flies that spread the disease is indoor spraying of houses
with synthetic pyrethroid, which has replaced DDT as the main way of combating mosquitoes and
sand flies. Mud houses are highly prone to sand fly infestation so building brick houses under the
PM Awas Yojana – intended mainly for improved housing-has the incidental advantage of reducing
kala azar too. For those already infected, accurate diagnosis is vital since it is often mistaken for
malaria and the wrong medicine may be administered.
3 Awareness and consumer education is vital, without which prevention will not work. Practitioners
speak of resistance from households, especially in tribal areas, to indoor spraying of insecticide
since it leaves a bad smell. Awareness and education are needed to convince people that temporarily
enduring a foul smell is better than risking blackening of the skin followed by death.
4 The worst-affected areas are also among those with the weakest administration, notably north
Bihar. Eliminating the disease should not be difficult because the ways of doing it are well
established. But it requires systematic planning and implementation, coordination between different
agencies, updating of technological improvements, good logistics, and good monitoring and
supervision. Good equipment is needed to spray the insecticide uniformly and comprehensively and this is not always available. States that are poorly administered are, almost by definition, poor in
public health management too. That is why the elimination of Kala azar has taken so long.
5 When India became independent in 1947, the population was an estimated 330 million of whom as
many as 75 million per year went down with malaria. The Malaria Eradication Programme, based
largely on indoor spraying of DDT, reduced cases to just 1,00,000 by 1964, and eradication seemed
round the corner. But then mosquitoes became DDT-tolerant, and DDT became discredited as an
insecticide because it was also an environmental hazard. Other insecticides were used but did not
have the same effect, and systematic indoor spraying withered away.
6 By the 1970s, malaria had returned in a big way. The caseload shot up to a peak of 6.4 million. It
diminished gradually after that. India had 1.1 million cases in 2014, but that came down
dramatically to just 1.6 lakh in 2021.The government’s target date for malaria eradication is now
2030, and that seems feasible. But past experience shows that diseases can bounce back with a
vengeance. Eternal vigilance is the price of eradication.
7 Let us cross our fingers and hope that kala azar is eradicated within the next two years, and
malaria by 2030. Even if we succeed, do not cheer too loudly. Other countries eradicated these
diseases long before us. India has been a laggard in combating infectious diseases. For a country that aspires to be a world leader, its performance so far has been an embarrassment

