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TB overwhelming Africa


Top level Resources News

It’s an ancient disease and completely curable. Yet, more than 2,4-m Africans are infected with tuberculosis and at least 540 000 die annually. Africa has become the epicenter of the TB epidemic and health leaders meeting in Addis Ababa this week have realised this is where they have put resources if they want to halt the disease globally.

African and international health and development leaders met for two days in Ethiopia, releasing a detailed “Road Map” to halt the continent’s spiraling TB epidemic, which in combination with HIV is overwhelming health services in the region.

The Road Map in essence calls for the establishment of an African Stop TB Partnership to build greater political commitment by governments to fight the disease, and for the African Union and NEPAD to mainstream TB control into the region’s health and development agenda.

The Road Map estimates that U$1,1-billion (Over R6-billion) will be needed in 2006 and 2007 to strengthen TB programmes and scale up measures to address HIV-associated TB in Africa.

Dr Paul Nunn, co-ordinator of the World Health Organisation team in the Stop TB Department defined the four main pillars of the Road Map as:



Over the last decade, DOTS programmes have diagnosed and treated millions of TB patients in Africa, and the results are remarkable in some countries, according to a media release by the Stop TB Partnership.

Ethiopia, which has implemented the DOTS programme, has an annual Gross Domestic Product per capita of U$100 (R600), yet it has TB cure rates comparable with countries that are 30 times richer.

However, performance of the region’s TB programmes is limited by the impact of HIV and by persistent health system constraints, especially the lack of sufficient trained staff. In sub-Saharan Africa there is one health worker per 1 000 population, compared to the global average of four.

This article is courtesy of Health-e News Service.

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