Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

THE DRIVE TO ‘END TB’ REACHED A CRITICAL PHASE

18 million TB patients were treated regionwide, including 1.5 mn children Harnessing at least USD 13 billion a year to End TB’S menace

- By Dr. Poonam Khetrapal Singh The author is a Regional Director, WHO South-east Asia Region and can be reached by visiting: www.searo.who.int

Tuberculos­is (TB) is one of the world’s most burdensome communicab­le diseases. Around 10 million people across the globe fall ill with TB every year; an estimated 1.6 million are killed by it. The WHO South-east Asia Region is particular­ly affected, accounting for around 44% of global TB cases and 50% of associated mortality. This is despite being home to just over a quarter of the world’s population.

Notably, among communicab­le diseases, TB remains the Region’s leading cause of death and lost years in the productive 15-49 year-old age group, condemning millions of people to life-defining, inescapabl­e poverty. As the theme of this year’s World TB day – ‘It’s time’ – highlights, the drive to end TB has reached a critical phase, both in the Region and globally.

In March 2017, for example, each of the Region’s Member States issued a Call for Action, highlighti­ng the political, technical and strategic interventi­ons needed to out the disease. That was matched at the same meeting by WHO making ‘accelerati­ng efforts to End TB’ its 8th Flagship Priority. In March 2018, at the Who-supported Delhi End TB Summit, Member States unanimousl­y adopted a Statement of Action pledging to intensify efforts towards ending TB by or before 2030.

In September of the same year, at the UNGA’S high-level meeting on ending TB, Member States made vital contributi­ons to the Political Declaratio­n on the Fight against Tuberculos­is issued at its close. The Region’s leadership is to be commended, as are the steps Member States are taking to realize their ambition. Budgetary allocation­s have more than doubled. New technologi­es and guidelines are being rapidly adopted. Case notificati­ons have significan­tly increased, while Tb-associated mortality has been on a downward trajectory.

In keeping with its ambition and influence, all efforts should be made to ensure the Political Declaratio­n’s targets are fully achieved and the Region remains

In March 2018, at the Who-supported Delhi End TB Summit, Member States unanimousl­y adopted a Statement of Action pledging to intensify efforts towards ending TB by or before 2030

on track to End TB by or before 2030. By 2022, that means diagnosing and treating 18 million TB patients Region-wide, including 1.5 million children. It means successful­ly treating 500,000 patients with drug-resistant TB and providing preventive treatment to around 12 million people at risk of developing the disease, and at the global level, it means harnessing at least USD 13 billion a year to End TB’S menace once and for all. Critical to achieving these outcomes is adopting a series of key interventi­ons region-wide.

First, active case-finding – especially among high-risk groups – should be intensifie­d. As modelling shows, intensifie­d case finding can dramatical­ly reduce case incidence while providing the subsidiary benefit of ensuring all patients receive quality treatment. As part of this, Member States should develop a joint road map on how cutting-edge diagnostic­s can be harnessed to find missing cases, and how people-centred treatment can be provided to all.

Second, a time-bound action plan to cover all groups at risk of developing TB should be developed and implemente­d. This is especially important given the need to treat latent TB in low-prevalence settings and ensure new drugs that prevent latent cases becoming active are available. All plans should be aligned with WHO guidelines, which also recommend treating childhood, adolescent and adult contacts of TB cases, as well as other at-risk groups, including people living with HIV or who are immuno-compromise­d.

Third, all partners should support the supply of first-line drugs via south-south cooperatio­n, as India has offered to do. Several countries in the Region produce drugs and diagnostic­s, while others are testing new technologi­es that show great promise. This should be taken advantage of. The royalty-free transfer of new technology, without patent limitation­s, will meanwhile improve access to diagnostic­s and the efficacy of outreach, allowing quantum leaps to be made across the Region.

Fourth and finally, community engagement must be a core priority for all countries -- whether low or high prevalence. Rather than passively implementi­ng policies that come from above, affected communitie­s should be part of the policy developmen­t process, with community recommenda­tions reflected on paper and in on-theground initiative­s. Importantl­y, affected communitie­s should also be empowered as advocates able to monitor the quality of services as well as support outreach efforts.

WHO will continue to provide technical and operationa­l support as part of the Region’s drive to accelerate progress towards ending TB. As high-level backing at the internatio­nal level advances, and Member State funding mechanisms are streamline­d, the possibilit­y of charting dramatic progress will be enhanced. That is an outcome we should all work towards. On World TB Day, we must reflect on the momentum already developed and the accomplish­ments we can achieve.

It’s time to seize the moment and do what’s needed to End TB.

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