UN and partners launch plan to stop transmission of bovine tuberculosis to humans
12 October 2017 – Stressing the damaging impact on poor rural communities in Africa and South-East Asia of animal
tuberculosis’ (bovine TB) transmission to humans, United Nations health experts launched the first-ever roadmap to
combat the so-called zoonotic TB.
“We have made progress towards ending tuberculosis, yet to a large extent people with zoonotic TB are left behind,” said
Mario Raviglione, Director of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Global TB Programme, in a news statement.
Today, at the 48th Union World Conference on Lung Health in Guadalajara, Mexico, WHO, the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO), World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE), and International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung
Disease, who have joined forces to develop the Roadmap for Zoonotic TB, launched the initiative – addressing the major
health and economic impacts of this disease.
“The priorities outlined in this roadmap highlight the need for multi-sectoral action to tackle this neglected form of
TB and achieve the targets of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and WHO’s End TB Strategy,” said Mr
Raviglione.
New data released by WHO estimates that over 140,000 people fall ill and more than 12,000 people lose their lives each
year to zoonotic TB, which is most often communicated to humans through food consumption, usually non-heat-treated dairy
products or raw or improperly cooked meat from diseased animals. Direct transmission from infected animals or animal
products to people can also occur.
“We must recognize the interdependence of the health of people and animals in the fight against TB. Specifically, bovine
TB, caused by Mycobacterium bovis, affects cattle, threatens people’s livelihoods and results in major economic and trade barriers, as well as posing a
major risk to food safety and human health,” said Berhe Tekola, Director of the FAO Animal Production and Health
Division.
The advanced laboratory tools required to diagnose zoonotic TB are frequently unavailable and the disease is resistant
to pyrazinamide – one of the standard first-line medications used to treat TB. Therefore, patients are often
misdiagnosed and may receive ineffective treatment.
The roadmap articulates 10 priority actions that human and animal health actors should take, and defines milestones for
the short- and medium-term, which include improving the evidence base; reducing transmission between animals and humans;
and strengthening intersectoral collaboration.
Zoonotic TB extends beyond human health
Bovine TB also threatens animal welfare and those with livestock-based livelihoods.
Economically, the disease can devastate cattle production with losses related to animal production, markets and trade,
as well as costs incurred to implement surveillance and control programmes. To eliminate it, domestic livestock found to
be infected with bovine TB must be slaughtered under veterinary supervision.
Wealthier countries are affected as well.
In the US between 2000 and 2008, more than $200 million in emergency funding was required to respond to bovine TB
outbreaks. Wildlife can also be infected, serving as a reservoir of infection for livestock and people, potentially
threatening conservation efforts.
ends