Rising rates of chronic disease among the poor in Andhra Pradesh paired with a sharp increase in alcohol-related illness especially among economically vulnerable populations raise pressing public health and equity questions in South India.
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Health data from Andhra Pradesh and Telangana show rising inequality in illness. Alcohol-related liver and neurological diseases have doubled in Andhra’s low-income groups, while diabetes is straining poor households in Telangana. Experts urge stronger public health systems, early detection, affordable care, and community programs that tackle both disease and poverty.
In Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, deep health inequalities are becoming visible on the ground. Andhra has seen a 100% rise in alcohol-related liver disease and a ninefold jump in neurological disorders linked to alcohol between 2019 and 2024. In Telangana, particularly in Hyderabad’s urban slums, diabetes and hypertension are spreading rapidly, burdening already struggling families. For many, managing chronic illness drains their limited savings, pushing them deeper into poverty. Meanwhile, alcohol cheap, accessible, and socially normalized often becomes a coping mechanism, further worsening health outcomes, especially with the added dangers of adulterated or unregulated brews.
Experts point to poor access to early screening, low nutritional quality diets, high healthcare costs, and economic stress as root causes driving this cycle. Addressing it requires stronger public health outreach in low-income areas, affordable treatment for diabetes and hypertension, stricter alcohol regulation, and better social safety nets. Integrating mental health support with non-communicable disease care and improving nutrition and income security are essential to break the link between poverty, illness, and addiction.
“When healthcare costs force a choice between sugar-testing and rent, disease wins. And when despair follows, alcohol becomes a dangerous refuge.”
By
HB Team
