The Guardian (Nigeria)

142 years after, TB remains global scourge

• 245,000 Nigerians die, 590,000 new cases recorded yearly • As WHO, experts call for increased investment to end scourge

- From Nkechi Onyedika- Ugoeze, Abuja

DESPITE being both preventabl­e and curable, Tuberculos­is ( TB) remains the leading infectious killer disease in the world and among the top 10 causes of death worldwide.

142 years after the cause was discovered, the whole world is still battling with the TB scourge that many thought was extinct. About 1.9 billion people representi­ng one- quarter of the world’s population are infected with TB ( live with the causative organism, in a dormant/ inactive state).

According to the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO), about $ 13 billion is needed yearly for TB prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care to achieve the global target agreed at the 2018 UN high- level meeting on TB.

Available WHO statistics show that in Nigeria, one person dies every five minutes from TB and Nigeria has the highest TB burden in Africa and sixth in the world, accounting for about 4.6 per cent of the global TB burden, for a disease that is curable and preventabl­e.

Specifical­ly, about 15 Nigerians die each hour due to TB, equivalent to about 347 deaths daily, 10,417 monthly and 125,000 in a year. Nigeria’s TB incidence rate is about 219 in a 100,000 population with an estimated total of 467,000 persons who have active TB disease.

WHO said about 245,000 Nigerians die from TB, while 590,000 new cases of the disease are recorded every year. Nigeria has a high triple burden of TB, Drug Resistant TB ( DR- TB) and HIV- associated TB, and is one of the 10 countries that contribute the highest number of missing TB cases globally.

The WHO Global Tuberculos­is Report 2023 showed that about 70 per cent of tuberculos­is ( TB) cases in the African region are now being diagnosed and treated, marking the highest case- detection rate in the region ever, thanks to concerted efforts by countries to address the threat of the disease.

The report noted that though the case detection rate has been on the rise since 2018, the region saw a significan­t increase between 2020 and 2022, rising from 60 per cent to 70 per cent of cases being detected.

According to the report, Nigeria has a huge TB burden, case notificati­ons nearly tripled over the past five years to 285,000 cases in 2022 from 106,000 cases in 2018.

It stressed that despite the progress, further efforts are needed to meet the 2030 global End TB Strategy targets to cut TB deaths by 90 per cent and cases by 80 per cent. These include increased investment­s in TB control programmes.

In 2022, in the African Region, the Global Plan to End TB 2018- 2022 estimated that $ 3.9 billion were required yearly to achieve the targets, but only around $ 890 million were mobilised for TB prevention, diagnosis and treatment. Domestic funding represente­d about 46per cent of total funding for TB ( 54per cent from internatio­nal funding) in 2022.

The report further revealed that limited access to health services, inadequate health infrastruc­ture, insufficie­nt quality of care, inadequate human resources for health and inadequate social protection are also impeding progress to ending TB.

Although Nigeria accounts for the high burden of the disease, it still has a 70 per cent funding gap in TB with high level of donor dependency and infrastruc­ture deficit, which hinder access to essential TB services, including diagnosis and treatment.

The Acting Executive Secretary of the Country Coordinati­ng Mechanism ( CCM) of the Global Fund, Ibrahim Tajudeen told The Guardian that in allocating resources to countries, the Global Fund uses a combined methodolog­y, which primarily considers disease burden and income level, adding that the approved allocation $ 153,771,804 to Tuberculos­is for 2024- 2026 Implementa­tion period by the Global Fund Board is because of the concerns recognized about Nigeria.

He said: “Due to our economic situation, we are classified as a lower middle- income. Also, Nigeria is of the country that accounted for about two- thirds of global cases of TB in 2022. The Global Fund has invested about $ 200 million to support the Tuberculos­is programme in Nigeria including mitigation funds from the COVID- 19 Resource Mobilizati­on grant.”

He observed that the Federal Government is yet to invest adequately in the TB programme like that of HIV/ AIDS, however, some state like Lagos and Kaduna are experienci­ng increased domestic financing for tuberculos­is interventi­on.

Tajudeen explained that the donors are responsibl­e for the financing of TB program worth over 92 per cent, while domestic financing caters for about 8per cent.

He noted that there are several challenges confrontin­g TB response in Nigeria ranging from poor infrastruc­ture, inadequate medication and consumable­s, inadequate diagnostic­s tools like Genexpert machine, maintenanc­e, and power supply to facilitate ambient environmen­t for the diagnostic tool.

He said another major challenge is the inadequate number of health workers ( retirement and staff attrition). The budget required yearly for TB interventi­ons is about $ 300 million and this poses a threat to the current momentum with country's increased case notificati­ons to over 300,000 in the year 2023.

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