"This disease, which is treatable and curable, is a significant economic drain, especially on our poor, and results in discrimination at schools and workplace," he said at an event 'Mumbai Dialogue: Towards a TB-Free India' here.
The Chairman Emeritus of Tata Sons noted that TB is not just a poor man's disease and today anyone can be affected by the bacterial infection that usually attacks the lungs, but they can also damage other parts of the body.
The 77-year-old investor-philanthropist said it is about time that corporates and communities collectively responded to end this epidemic in our country.
According to the WHO estimates, as many as 2.4 lakh Indians die of TB each year and 61,000 suffer from multi drug-resistant tuberculosis.
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Tata, along with megastar Amitabh Bachchan and US Ambassador Richard Verma, launched 'Mumbai Dialogue: Towards a TB-Free India', which aims to engage corporates to strengthen the government's call to action to eradicate the disease.
However, there is still much more that needs to be done to end TB in India, and the government cannot do it alone, Verma said. "We need a multi-sectoral approach, in which partners, public and private, collaborate to achieve this ambitious yet attainable goal."
Bachchan, himself a TB survivor, said, "As someone who has been infected with TB, I can tell you of the devastation this disease can cause to a person's life. It can often take months to be diagnosed. Even when the diagnosis is accurate, getting the right treatment is not always easy."