4.7 Article

The WHO Global Tuberculosis 2021 Report - not so good news and turning the tide back to End TB

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 124, Issue -, Pages S26-S29

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijid.2022.03.011

Keywords

Tuberculosis; WHO 2021 Global TB Report; MDR/XDR-TB; New tools; COVID-19; END TB Strategy

Funding

  1. EU-EDCTP
  2. Mahathir Foundation Science Award

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The 2021 WHO global TB report presents a grim situation in the global epidemic of TB, including a stagnation in TB incidence decline, a decline in TB notifications, and an increase in estimated TB deaths. None of the targets set at the 2018 United Nations High Level Meeting on TB were achieved. The sub-optimal global performance in achieving TB control targets in 2020 is attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic, but TB programs were already off track before the pandemic, highlighting the fragility of the global TB response. Ending the global TB epidemic requires bold leadership, optimization of interventions, widespread coverage, addressing social determinants, and mobilization of adequate funding.
Objective: To review the data presented in the 2021 WHO global TB report and discuss the current constraints in the global response. Introduction and methods: The WHO global TB reports, consolidate TB data from countries and provide up to date assessment of the global TB epidemic. We reviewed the data presented in the 2021 report. Results: We noted that the 2021 WHO global TB report presents a rather grim picture on the trajectory of the global epidemic of TB including a stagnation in the annual decline in TB incidence, a decline in TB notifications and an increase in estimated TB deaths. All the targets set at the 2018 United Nations High Level Meeting on TB were off track. Interpretation and conclusion: The sub-optimal global performance on achieving TB control targets in 2020 is attributed to the on-going COVID-19 pandemic, however, TB programs were already off track well before the onset of the pandemic, suggesting that the pandemic amplified an already fragile global TB response. We emphasize that ending the global TB epidemic will require bold leadership, optimization of existing interventions, widespread coverage, addressing social determinants of TB and importantly mobilization of adequate funding required for TB care and prevention. (C) 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of International Society for Infectious Diseases.

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