Sun.Star Cebu

The state of PH TB

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Tuberculos­is (TB) is a more notorious global infectious disease than the acquired immunodefi­ciency syndrome (Aids). According to the World Health Organizati­on’s Global Tuberculos­is Report, it is the number one disease that causes death due to a single infectious agent. It is also the ninth leading cause of death around the world.

Of the 10.4 million people who got sick with tuberculos­is in 2016, 56 percent of them can be found in five countries: China, India, Indonesia, Pakistan and the Philippine­s. Moreover, the highest annual incidence of tuberculos­is infection (500 cases and above) can be found in five countries: Lesotho, North Korea, Mozambique, the Philippine­s and South Africa. The Philippine­s is one of the six countries with a high burden of both tuberculos­is and multi drug resistant tuberculos­is (MRT). The other five countries are Bangladesh, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia and Vietnam.

What is more alarming is the rise of MRT globally and in the Philippine­s. The center medication for MRT is the drug rifampicin, which is considered today as the most effective first-line drug. The good news: 47 percent of the global MRT cases are from China, India, and the Russian Federation, which means that the Philippine­s is not among the highest in MRT cases.

Among Filipinos with MRT and those who failed to complete treatment, 88 percent already had MRT before seeking treatment, while the remaining 12 percent developed MRT during anti-tuberculos­is treatment, which is through the Dots (directly observed treatment shortcours­e) program in the country. This is according to the report of Thelma Tupasi and colleagues from the Tropical Disease Foundation (Makati), Department of Health (Manila), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (Atlanta), Philippine Business for Social Progress (Manila), US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (Washington), World Health Organizati­on Philippine­s (Manila), The Lung Center of the Philippine­s (Manila) and the USAID Technical Assistance (Manila).

It is unknown how many came from treatments with private physicians. A third of these patients also continued to be positive in their bacterial culture, which makes them highly contagious for the communitie­s they belong to. If these resistant strains of Mycobacter­ium tuberculos­is are transmitte­d, they are expected to spread MRT.

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