Tuberculosis

Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the world’s biggest global health crises. Killing 1.5 million people in 2020, TB is the world’s second deadliest infectious disease after COVID-19 (WHO).

Obsolete treatments, the lack of an effective vaccine, and the lack of suitable diagnostic tools make it difficult to control the global TB epidemic.

Some gains have been made in recent years; the first new TB drugs in half a century and the trial of a shorter course of treatment for drug-resistant TB (DR-TB). But the harsh reality remains - 10 million people fell sick with TB in 2020 and nearly half a million developed DR-TB, which is much harder to treat. Only about one-third of people with DR-TB accessed treatment in 2020. The majority go undiagnosed and therefore untreated.

IN 2021

Quick facts about Tuberculosis

 
Multi-drug Resistant Tuberculosis

MDR-TB drugs cover less than 5% in need

Report 11 Oct 2017
 
HIV/AIDS

CAR: “The only people left in Zemio are those who couldn’t run away”

11 Sep 2017
 
Cancer

IOL: Patient groups welcome release of Draft Intellectual Property Policy

Latest News 17 Aug 2017
 
Cancer

Patient groups welcome release of Draft Intellectual Property Policy

Press Release 14 Aug 2017
 
Tuberculosis

Simon Mendelsohn: “When a prison sentence is a death sentence”

Fieldworkers Stories 4 Aug 2017
 
Drug-resistant TB

MSF nurse wins HIV-TB prize for life-saving TB test research

Press Release 28 Jul 2017