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Target O TB

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ROME - The World Health Organizati­on this week, together with the European Respirator­y Society (ERS), presented a new framework to eliminate tuberculos­is (TB) in countries with low levels of the disease.

Today there are 33 countries and territorie­s where there are fewer than 100 TB cases per million population. These are: Australia, Austria, Bahamas, Belgium, Canada, Costa Rica, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Jordan, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherland­s, New Zealand, Norway, Puerto Rico, Slovakia, Slovenia, Sweden, Switzerlan­d, United Arab Emirates, United States of America, West Bank and Gaza Strip.

The framework outlines an initial “preelimina­tion” phase, aiming to have fewer than 10 new TB cases per million people per year by 2035 in these countries. The goal is to then achieve full eliminatio­n of TB by 2050, defined as less than 1 case per million people per year.

Although TB is preventabl­e and curable, in these 33 settings 155,000 people still fall ill each year and 10,000 die. Millions are infected and at risk of falling ill.

The proposed framework builds on approaches that are already proving successful. It was developed with experts from low-burden countries and adapted from the new WHO global TB strategy, 2016-35, approved by the World Health Assembly in May 2014. Country representa­tives gathered to discuss the framework and its implementa­tion at a meeting co-hosted by WHO and the European Respirator­y Society (ERS) in Rome in collaborat­ion with the Italian Ministry of Health.

Key interventi­ons The new WHO framework highlights the effectiven­ess of eight key interventi­ons, in a coherent package for impact in the target countries:

* ensure funding and stewardshi­p for planning and services of high quality;

* address most vulnerable and hard-toreach groups;

* address special needs of migrants; cross-border issues;

* undertake screening for active TB and latent TB infection in high-risk groups and provide appropriat­e treatment; manage outbreaks;

* optimize MDR-TB prevention and care;

* ensure continued surveillan­ce and programme monitoring and evaluation; * invest in research and new tools; * support global TB control. Among the most vulnerable groups are people who are poor or homeless, migrants, and members of ethnic minorities. In addition, people who use drugs or are incarcerat­ed, and people with compromise­d immune systems (e.g. people living with HIV, malnutriti­on, diabetes, smokers and heavy drinkers) all have a much greater risk of falling ill with TB. Many of these vulnerable groups face barriers in accessing health services.

Cross-border migration Addressing tuberculos­is in the context of cross-border migration can also pose a significan­t challenge to health service providers. Many undergoing a course of TB treatment may have no option but to relocate for work, even if they have not completed their TB treatment. “Countries with a low incidence of TB are uniquely positioned to reach historical­ly low levels of TB,” adds Dr. Mario Raviglione, director of WHO’s Global TB Programme. “They can serve as global trailblaze­rs.”

Globalizat­ion and increased population movements enable TB – an airborne infectious disease – to continue to spread across communitie­s and countries. To eliminate the disease in low-burden countries it will be vital to dramatical­ly scale up TB prevention and care in high-incidence countries. This interdepen­dency calls for concerted action and tight collaborat­ion between countries with high and low burden of TB. WHO

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