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Leprosy in India: The road to a disease-free future

Leprosy in India

Leprosy in India: The leprosy prevalence rate in India has declined from 57.2 per 10,000 (1981) to 0.57 per 10,000 (2025), a major public health achievement. Despite this, the National Leprosy Elimination Programme (NLEP) has now adopted the National Strategic Plan and Roadmap for Leprosy 2023 to 2027, which aims to stop transmission and achieve zero indigenous cases by the year 2030.

What is leprosy?

Symptoms:

Transmission:

It is spread through droplets from the nose and mouth during frequent, close contact with untreated patients.

Symptoms usually take about 3-5 years to appear after exposure to the bacteria that cause leprosy.

Types of Leprosy

First: Paucibacillary (PB):

  1. Few or no bacteria are found in a slit-skin smear.
  2. The patient has a very low number of leprosy bacteria (mild form)

Second: Multibacillary (MB):

  1. A high number of bacteria are found in a slit-skin smear.
  2. A very high number of leprosy bacteria is found in the patient’s body (more severe and infectious form).

Treatment and Control

Leprosy, caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium leprae, is one of the world’s oldest known diseases. Knowledge of the disease dates back thousands of years to the oldest civilizations in China, Egypt, and India. World Leprosy Day is celebrated on the last Sunday of January; in India it is celebrated on 30 January.

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