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

 
Drug-resistant TB

‘We demand action’: Death toll from drug-resistant tuberculosis must be slashed within a year

Press Release 19 May 2014
 
south Sudanese refugees in Ethiopia’s Gambella region
HIV/AIDS

South Sudan: Gruesome targeted killings in Bentiu Hospital

Press Release 29 Apr 2014
 
HIV/AIDS

Myanmar: MSF acknowledges encouraging dialogue on Rakhine but clinics remain closed

Press Release 24 Mar 2014
 
Briefing Document

Issue Brief: Ready, set, slow down

24 Mar 2014
Briefing Document
 
Briefing Document

MSF crisis alert: The new face of an old disease

20 Mar 2014
Briefing Document
 
Tuberculosis

Urgent action needed to tackle global drug-resistant TB threat

Press Release 20 Mar 2014