Fewer people are dying of
tuberculosis in South-East Asia
New Delhi, 21 March 2013: Significantly fewer people are dying of
tuberculosis today in South-East Asia compared with 1990, according to the
World Health Organization. The death rate due to the disease has decreased by
more than 40% in the past 13 years. This achievement is attributed to greater
public awareness of TB, an increased number of cases being detected, and more
people having access to adequate treatment because of the sustained efforts by
Member States, assisted by WHO. On World
TB Day 2013, WHO calls on Member States to “Stop TB in South-East Asia – zero
death to zero infection.”
Emphasizing that
tuberculosis elimination is a social and public health responsibility, Dr Samlee
Plianbangchang, Regional Director, WHO South-East Asia Region, said, “To
successfully eliminate TB, we must pay attention to the underlying causes of
the spread of the disease, such as poverty, the environment, and nutrition.” He added, “Expanding services to billions of
people, of diverse languages and cultures, faced with rapid urbanization and
large population displacements in many countries is a major task. TB detection
and treatment facilities must be made accessible and affordable to the hard-to-reach
and unreached populations at the primary health centres.”
As access to TB
care has expanded substantially, the number of people with TB, or the TB
prevalence rate, has also declined by a fourth in the Region compared with
1990. All 11 Member countries of the Region have adopted the WHO Stop TB
Strategy. More than 88% known TB patients have been successfully treated. Five
countries have had a bigger treatment success rate: Bangladesh (92%), Bhutan
(90%), Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (90%), Indonesia (90%), and Nepal
(90%).
Good performance by
countries in implementing DOTS (directly observed treatment, short-course), the
cornerstone for ensuring TB is
successfully treated, has led to relatively low levels of multidrug resistant
TB in newly detected cases.
Advances in
diagnostics are also contributing to success in TB control. Six countries in this Region – Bangladesh,
India, Indonesia, Myanmar, Nepal and Thailand – have introduced Xpert MTB/RIIF,
a system that detects the disease, including TB that is resistant to the
antibiotic rifampicin, rapidly, within 100 minutes. Rapid detection of TB
enables health providers to ensure patients get treated quickly and
appropriately, and prevents its spread.
However, absolute
numbers are still high. There were an estimated 5 million TB patients in 2011
in the Region, with 3.5 million new cases. Half a million people died of TB
that year. There were also an estimated 90 000 cases of multidrug-resistant
(MDR) TB in 2011. This is nearly a third
of the estimated number of people with MDR-TB in the world. This is mainly due
to the large and growing population in this Region.
Substantial
challenges remain. An estimated one third of TB cases continues to remain
unreported. Such cases are of concern as they unknowingly help spread the
disease in the community and pose a serious risk of drug-resistant TB. This
makes successful treatment difficult, and leads to high TB mortality. There is a need to increase technical and managerial
capacity within national programmes, provide additional funding for TB
programmes, extend community-based care, and develop new tools and improve
laboratory capacity to better diagnose and more effectively treat patients and
stop multidrug resistant TB.
TB elimination
cannot be achieved by the health sector alone. It requires coordinated efforts
by other sectors, such as environment, infection control, water and sanitation.
With adequate resources and dedicated efforts, it is possible to “Stop TB in
South-East Asia – zero death to zero infection” in this generation.
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