An urgent call to action on World TB
Reaching the undiagnosed: An urgent call to action on World TB Day
Far too many cases are being missed and multidrug-resistant TB is on the rise
MANILA, 22 March 2014 – On World TB Day (24 March), the World Health Organization in the Western Pacific Region reiterates the need for governments, policy-makers, health care providers and civil society organizations to prioritize interventions to urgently find, treat and cure the millions of people who remain undiagnosed with the disease.
Globally, of the estimated 9 million people a year who develop tuberculosis (TB), some 30 percent—3 million—are “missed” meaning they are not found, treated and reported to national health authorities. In the Western Pacific Region, an estimated 1 in 5 TB cases are missed.
Cambodia, China, the Philippines and Viet Nam, account for 93% of the estimated regional TB burden of 1.6 million cases and 110 000 deaths each year. These four countries are among the 22 high-burden countries worldwide.
“We must ensure that we can identify
every single case of TB, as many individuals with TB remain
undiagnosed and untreated,” advised Dr Shin Young-soo, WHO
Regional Director for the Western Pacific. “Universal
access to TB treatment and care must include not only
standardized effective treatment, but also adequately
trained health care providers who will help in successfully
finding, treating and curing every patient.”
“A
significant challenge in the Region is that there are too
many people with TB who remain undiagnosed in the
community,” noted Dr Nobuyuki Nishikiori, Team Leader,
Stop TB and Leprosy Elimination, WHO Regional Office for the
Western Pacific. “The majority of these cases are people
who live in some of the poorest and most vulnerable
communities, or are among marginalized populations such as
migrants, prisoners, and ethnic minorities. Ensuring TB
services for children and the elderly is also a challenge
due to difficulties in diagnosis and treatment.”
Apart
from the high number of missed TB cases, another challenge
in the Region is the threat of drug-resistant TB, with an
estimated 75 000 multi drug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) patients
added annually and increasing numbers of patients with
extensively drug-resistant (XDR) TB. WHO analysis shows that
the majority of MDR-TB is in newly diagnosed TB patients,
meaning people are being infected by resistant strains. This
is in addition to patients developing resistance only during
their treatment.
“Although TB treatment itself is free from government health services, on average half of all patients experience a catastrophic financial burden,” Dr Nishikiori said. “There are significant medical expenses besides the drugs. Many patients must travel long distances to access clinics and medication, so their transportation costs are high. Then there’s lost income when they can’t work for long periods of time. And sadly, many TB patients still experience significant stigma as they often lose their social support and employment, often rejected by family and shamed for their condition.”
To meet these challenges, WHO through extensive consultation with Member States and international partners, has developed a new global strategy that was recommended for consideration and adoption by the sixty-seventh World Health Assembly which meets this coming May. The vision for this TB strategy is “a world free of TB”, also expressed as “zero deaths, disease and suffering due to TB”.
"TB control today is in a dynamic stage of transformation, with new diagnostics, drugs and even vaccines in the pipeline," concluded Dr Shin, “building on the huge successes we have made, and with these new tools and global strategy, I'm confident we can overcome these challenges and provide a safer world for our children, increase social equity and eliminate this disease, which continues to cause far too much suffering for far too many people in the Region and around the world.”
Key
facts
• Tuberculosis
(TB) is second only to HIV/AIDS as the greatest killer
worldwide due to a single infectious agent.
• In 2012,
8.6 million people fell ill with TB and 1.3 million died
from TB.
• Over 95% of TB deaths occur in low- and
middle-income countries, and it is among the top three
causes of death for women aged 15 to 44.
• In 2012, an
estimated 530 000 children became ill with TB and 74 000
HIV-negative children died of TB.
• TB is a leading
killer of people living with HIV causing one fifth of all
deaths.
• Multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB) is present
in virtually all countries surveyed.
• The estimated
number of people falling ill with tuberculosis each year is
declining, although very slowly, which means that the world
is on track to achieve the Millennium Development Goal to
reverse the spread of TB by 2015.
• The TB death rate
dropped by 45% between 1990 and 2012.
• An estimated 22
million lives were saved through use of DOTS and the Stop TB
Strategy recommended by WHO.
Related links:
World
TB Day 2014
http://www.who.int/campaigns/tb-day/2014/event/en/
WHO’s work on TB
http://www.who.int/tb/en/
Fact
sheet: Tuberculosis
http://who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs104/en/
Regional Strategy to Stop Tuberculosis in the
Western Pacific 2011–2015
http://www.wpro.who.int/tb/documents/policy/2010/regional_strategy/en/
Stop TB Partnership
http://www.stoptb.org/
WHO:
China world leader in tuberculosis control
http://www.wpro.who.int/china/mediacentre/releases/2014/20140321/en/
Ends