International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC)
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Health and community care
 

Tuberculosis

Responding to the global pandemic of tuberculosis

Tuberculosis (TB) is the single most deadly infectious disease and kills two million people each year. Of the eight million new cases annually, 95 per cent are in developing countries. Asia and sub-Saharan Africa are the hardest hit, but Eastern Europe has recently seen a major increase in the incidence and deaths related to TB after many years of steady decline. An estimated 75 per cent of people with TB are between the ages of 15-44, which is seriously damaging socio-economic development.

In 1993, the World Health Organisation (WHO) launched the Stop TB initiative in response to the growing crisis. Since 1998, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies has been working closely with National Societies and the WHO to control the TB epidemic in Eastern Europe. These efforts were initially intended to serve as pilot projects to gain experience and to provide assistance to patients and their families. Such programmes have shown that there is an urgent need to scale up activities in order to have a greater impact on the epidemic worldwide.

The best way to prevent new cases of TB is by breaking the chain of transmission through early detection of active cases and assuring complete and effective treatment of people with the disease. TB transmission continues because many patients are never diagnosed or are diagnosed late in the course of their disease. Moreover, complete treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis requires at least six months of daily therapy with three or more antibiotics following the initial treatment period. Many patients with active tuberculosis, however, feel better after several weeks of treatment and do not complete a full treatment course and therfore may still represent a high risk.

To assure that complete treatment of patients with active TB, the WHO has promoted the use of Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course (DOTS). DOTS has proven to be a cost-effective and successful treatment method. A full course of treatment lasts for about six months and can cost as little as US$11.

Controlling TB requires more than just providing medicines to patients. It necessitates a comprehensive public health response. This must include education, early case detection through careful surveillance, microscopy, bacteriological testing, social support to patients and their families, counselling, and finally assuring that affected individuals complete their full treatment course. In this regard, in collaboration with national ministries of health, the WHO and other partners, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement can play a major role in fighting TB.

Reports and publications

The Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (GFATM) Niger Project - Annual report NGR 405 G03M (July 2005 - June 2006) (400 kb, 26 pages)
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