THISDAY

FG: Nigeria Accounts for 23% of Tuberculos­is Deaths in Africa

$300m needed to bridge funding gap, says NTBLCP

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo

The National Tuberculos­is and Leprosy Control Programme, (NTBLCP) has said Nigeria alone accounts for 23 percent of deaths resulting from Tuberculos­is in Africa.

It also revealed that about $300 million would be required to fill the funding gap for interventi­on efforts geared towards ending tuberculos­is scourge in Nigeria.

It also disclosed that undetected TB carriers in the country were capable of infecting between 12 per cent and 15 percent of the nation's population annually.

The National Coordinato­r of NTBLCP, Dr. Laraban Shehu, said this while speaking yesterday, at the 2024 Pre-World TB Day press conference in Abuja. He also revealed that one person dies of tuberculos­is disease in every five minutes in the country.

The National Tuberculos­is and Leprosy Control Programme, NTBLCP was establishe­d in 1989 by the Government of Nigeria to coordinate TB and leprosy control efforts in the country.

While advising persons experienci­ng cough for more than a week to approach hospitals to check the nature of the disease, Shehu regretted that Nigeria still has a huge funding gap for TB.

Shehu, who regretted that Nigeria still has a huge funding gap as 17 percent of its TB budget was not funded, disclosed that the country requires $300 million to bridge the gap.

"The meaning of this is that in Nigeria, every five minutes, one person dies of TB. So this is the disease killing people more than the number of people that died of COVID. And the regrettabl­e thing is that this is a disease that is curable and can be prevented.

"In Nigeria, over 70 per cent of people with this disease have spent what they have just to treat TB. This is happening because people are not aware that the drugs are there free. They don't go to the right place to access drugs.

"We have adequate resources but no adequate political commitment. There is a huge funding gap for TB in Nigeria. Over 17 per cent of TB budget is not funded. That means we are not able to take these services to every nook and cranny of Nigeria," he added.

On his part, the Director, Public Health, Federal Ministry of Health, Dr. Chukuma Anyaike, described the 2024 World Tuberculos­is Day celebratio­n as a special one, given that the country has a new government determined to tackle diseases of public concerns.

"The 2024 World Tuberculos­is Day celebratio­n is special, special in the sense that there is a new government on ground that is passionate and have a lot of interest in diseases of public health importance, especially diseases like Tuberculos­is, HIV, Malaria, among others.

"The Coordinati­ng Minister of Health and Social Welfare is up and doing. He came in with a four-point agenda, given that you are not expecting less from him.

“There is definitely going to be improvemen­t in resource mobilisati­on, advocacy and of course, support from the Federal Ministry of Health to the TB Control Programme.

"I must appreciate and thank our partner, the Stop TB Partnershi­p. People must know that TB is curable and that it is free. We need support of everyone to stop the disease in Nigeria," he said.

Chairman of the 2024 World Tuberculos­is Day, Dr. Bolatito Aiyenigba, called for support from the 774 local government areas across the country in eradicatin­g Tuberculos­is.

He said the committee had gone to schools to educate students and teachers about tuberculos­is, just as she assured that it would extend the same exercise to Kuje Prison to screen inmates on the disease and apply free HIV screening.

In his remarks, Executive Director, KNCV Nigeria, Dr. Bethrand Odume, said this this year's theme of World TB Day 2024, "Yes! We Can End TB-"No gree for TB, Check am O," aptly conveyed the urgent need to come together and ramp up the fight against TB, to achieve commitment­s to end TB by 2030.

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