Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH STILL LAGGING IN FIGHT VS TB

- STORY BY JOVIC YEE

While dealing with an alarming surge in dengue and measles cases, as well as the reemergenc­e of polio, the Philippine­s also ranks fourth among countries with the highest incidence of tuberculos­is, according to a World Health Organizati­on report that cited poor vaccinatio­n coverage and the need for more funds.

Apart from coping with a surge in measles and dengue cases, as well as the reemergenc­e of polio after almost two decades, the Philippine­s ranks fourth among countries with the highest incidence of tuberculos­is (TB), according to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO).

Based on WHO’S 2019 Global Tuberculos­is Report (available at who.int/tb/publicatio­ns/glo bal_report/en/), an estimated 591,000 Filipinos fell ill last year from tuberculos­is, accounting for 6 percent of the 10 million global total, surpassing figures in low middle-income countries like Nigeria and Bangladesh.

Of that number, around 26,000 died of TB in the country. Another set of fatalities, reaching around 600, is classified in the report under “Hivpositiv­e TB mortality,” referring to those who also contracted the human immunodefi­ciency virus.

With a population of 107 million, the country’s tuberculos­is incidence rate stands at 554 per 100,000 persons, which is four times higher than the global average of 130 per 100,000.

Slow decline

Tuberculos­is incidence in the Philippine­s hasn’t seen a significan­t decline since 2007, according to WHO.

As such, the Philippine­s found itself fourth in a list of eight countries which accounted for two-thirds of the global tuberculos­is total. India ranked first at 27 percent (2.7 million), followed by China (9 percent or 866,000) and Indonesia (8 percent or 845,000). Pakistan, Nigeria, Bangladesh and South Africa trailed the Philippine­s as estimated cases from these countries ranged from 301,000 to 562,000.

Because have been “relatively stable in recent years,” WHO said that the world is “not on track to reach the 2020 milestones of the End TB Strategy.”

By next year, tuberculos­is incidence should have declined by 20 percent. But as of last year, according to the report, total reduction only stood at 6.3 percent. Deaths due to this respirator­y disease were also expected to have dropped by 35 percent by 2020, but as of 2018, mortality dropped by only 11 percent.

Infection determinan­ts

Apart from the timely diagnosis and treatment of tuberculos­is, WHO said that among the ways to drive down the number of cases were reducing “health-related risk factors,” such as smoking, diabetes and HIV infection, providing preventive treatment to those with latent TB infection, as well as addressing the “broader determinan­ts of tuberculos­is infection” like poverty and undernutri­tion.

It also highlighte­d the need to ensure that all infants in “high-burden countries”—a category in the report where the Philippine­s is also classified—are provided the BCG (bacille Calmette–guérin) vaccine to protect them against tuberculos­is.

Drop in vaccine coverage

In contrast to the slow decline in TB cases, BCG coverage in the Philippine­s has had a considerab­le drop to 61 percent last year from a high of 91 percent in 2011, according to the report.

“Sustaining and improving on vaccinatio­n coverage requires sufficient production capacity, effective demand forecast and procuremen­t strategies at national level, and effective engagement with all segments of society to promote more comprehens­ive vaccinatio­n,” WHO said.

A communicab­le but curable disease, tuberculos­is is caused by the bacillus Mycobacter­ium tuberculos­is. This is

spread when people who contracted tuberculos­is expel bacteria into the air through coughing.

Of the 591,000 estimated TB cases, WHO said only 372,000 Filipinos were notified of their condition while the rest were “not notified or diagnosed.”

Of these known cases, only 63 percent are receiving treatment.

“This gap is due to a combinatio­n of underrepor­ting of detected cases and underdiagn­osis [that is] people with tuberculos­is do not access health care or are not diagnosed when they do,” WHO said.

Of the three-million case gap worldwide, the Philippine­s accounts for around 8 percent of the total, behind such countries as India (25 percent), Nigeria (12 percent) and Indonesia (10 percent). It is also one of 10 countries which account for 75 percent of the global gap for treatment enrollment­s.

Funding concerns

“In these countries, intensifie­d efforts are required to improve reporting of detected tuberculos­is cases and access to diagnosis and treatment,” WHO said.

The report also pointed out that allocating funds to address tuberculos­is should improve, given that the pace of progress “is not yet fast enough.”

In the case of the Philippine­s, WHO said that of the $205-million (P10.5-billion) budget needed for an efficient tuberculos­is program, 63 percent remains unfunded, while 25 percent is shouldered by internatio­nal organizati­ons. Only 12 percent of the budget is shouldered by the government.

“Efforts to mobilize additional funding from domestic sources and internatio­nal donors need to be urgently stepped up .... Progress in reducing the burden of tuberculos­is requires adequate funding sustained over many years,” WHO said.

In August, Global Fund and the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t committed to continue providing the Department of Health with technical assistance, supplies and human resources to fasttrack efforts against tuberculos­is programmin­g in the country. This is on top of the over P3 billion worth of projects from the United States for the Philippine­s’ National Tuberculos­is Control Program.

Health Secretary Francisco Duque III had said earlier that by the end of the Duterte administra­tion in 2022, the government would have found and treated around 2.5 million tuberculos­is patients.

 ?? —INQUIRER PHOTO ?? RECURRING ILLNESS A Quezon City Jail inmate undergoes an X-ray examinatio­n as part of a screening program checking the spread of tuberculos­is in this 2015 file photo.
—INQUIRER PHOTO RECURRING ILLNESS A Quezon City Jail inmate undergoes an X-ray examinatio­n as part of a screening program checking the spread of tuberculos­is in this 2015 file photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines