India records most new leprosy cases

19:00 AEST Mon Jul 30 2012
AAP
Fatima, 65, suffers from the advanced stages of leprosy
Fatima, 65, suffers from the advanced stages of leprosy

India has accounted for 56 per cent of the world's new leprosy infections in 2010 despite declaring itself free of the nerve-destroying disease five years earlier, a report says.

Of the 228,474 new leprosy cases in the world in 2010, India accounted for 126,800, S.D. Gokhale, president of the International Leprosy Union (India), told the Press Trust of India news agency on Saturday.

"If the union and state governments do not take serious note of this fact and initiate effective steps to eradicate leprosy, the problem will become more acute," Gokhale was quoted as saying.

Leprosy is a curable chronic infectious disease which mainly affects the skin, peripheral nerves, upper respiratory tract and the eyes.

The bacteria that causes the disease multiply very slowly and the incubation period is about five years. Symptoms can take as long as 20 years to appear.

Gokhale, speaking following a three-day meeting of the International Leprosy Union in the western Indian city of Pune, said the leprosy infection figures had been confirmed by India's health ministry.


Valet attendant delivers baby in car park Getty images300,000 day-old babies die a year in India

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