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World Health Organization Director-General Nominee Sees Reduction in TB Transmission but HIV a Major Threat to TB Control.


Health/Medical Writers

World TB Day 24 March 2003

LONDON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 24, 2003

Dr Jong Noun 1. Jong - United States writer (born in 1942)
Erica Jong
 Wook Lee, Director-General nominee of the World Health Organization (WHO), said today that for the first time since WHO declared TB a 'Global Emergency' in 1993 there are real prospects for turning the tide against the epidemic -- but only if the international community kept its focus, accelerated action particularly in the key endemic countries and increased resources for the Global Plan to Stop TB.

Speaking in London at a press conference organized by the global Stop TB Partnership on World TB Day (24 March 2003) with UK Secretary of State for International Development In the United Kingdom, the Secretary of State for International Development is a Cabinet minister responsible for promoting development overseas and for the Department for International Development, particularly in the third world.  Clare Short Clare Short (born 15 February, 1946) is a British politician and a member of the British Labour Party. She is currently the Independent Member of Parliament for Birmingham Ladywood, having been elected as a Labour Party MP in 1983, and was Secretary of State for International , Dr Lee said the accumulating number of patients cured under DOTS, the internationally recommended TB strategy, has clearly slowed the spread of infection and signals a significant public health development. The international health community was closing in on TB, with a clear programme strategy and effective structures to do the job.

"By redoubling our efforts - and with strengthened funding for the Global Plan to Stop TB - we could expect to see a reduction in the sickness and death caused by tuberculosis world wide within the next few years, as we are already seeing in some countries like Peru," he said. "But we stand at a crossroads in this struggle and must not lose our direction and momentum. If we falter in our efforts at this crucial juncture, the hard-won progress of the past decade could easily be halted and even reversed."

The number of countries that have adopted the DOTS strategy has grown from fewer than 20 in 1993 to 155 and more than 60 percent of the world's population now have access to free DOTS services, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the WHO 2003 Global TB Control Report published today (24 March). Ten million patients have been cured by DOTS - more than 90 percent of them in developing countries. In recent years, DFID DFID Department For International Development (UK) , the World Bank and other major donors have significantly increased funding to support the Global Plan to Stop TB.

Secretary of State Clare Short said: "There is good news today - curing 10 million TB patients is a massive achievement. But TB remains a significant problem for the world and hits poor communities very hard. We must make better progress. We can only do that by working in partnership with governments and other agencies to build sustainable systems that can deliver treatment to all."

Dr Lee warned that while TB transmission had been reduced, the main drivers of the epidemic - HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States.  infection, population growth, poverty and migration - would capitalise on any let-up in efforts: "The TB epidemic is still growing unabated in Africa and the countries of the former Soviet Union, where it is linked with HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome , poverty and social disruption δSocial disruption is a term used in sociology to describe the alteration or breakdown of social life, often in a community setting. For example, the closing of a community grocery store might cause social disruption in a community by removing a “meeting ground” . One third of the world's entire population is infected with TB bacilli bacilli /ba·cil·li/ (bah-sil´i) plural of bacillus.

bacilli

see bacillus.
, and when HIV hits a pool of latent TB infection it is like putting a match to petrol. We have seen this most clearly in sub-Saharan Africa, where TB rates have quadrupled in some high-HIV countries since the mid-1980s. Our greatest fear is that as HIV becomes entrenched en·trench   also in·trench
v. en·trenched, en·trench·ing, en·trench·es

v.tr.
1. To provide with a trench, especially for the purpose of fortifying or defending.

2.
, a new explosion of tuberculosis could be ignited."

As antiretrovirals are more widely used to extend the lives of people living with AIDS, DOTS must become part of the treatment package for people with TB and AIDS, he said. Treating their tuberculosis is the surest and most cost-effective way to increase life expectancy Life Expectancy

1. The age until which a person is expected to live.

2. The remaining number of years an individual is expected to live, based on IRS issued life expectancy tables.
.

Among the main national success stories cited by WHO:
-- In India, which alone accounts for nearly a quarter of the global burden, more than 1 million TB patients have been treated since DOTS expansion began in late 1998, and 50,000 new patients are now started on treatment every month. By early 2002, the DOTS program was credited with already saving 200,000 lives and more than US $400 million in indirect costs. In China, second on the list of high burden countries, 1.3 million people with infectious TB have been treated under DOTS over the last decade and 90 percent of them cured. As a result, active TB cases have fallen 35 percent in areas applying DOTS compared to a small increase in areas not covered. The DOTS expansion programs in both India and China have been supported with loans from the World Bank.

-- Two high burden countries, Vietnam and Peru, have already exceeded the global TB control targets for 2005 of identifying 70 percent of infectious TB cases and curing 85 percent of those identified. As a result, Peru fell off the list of high burden countries in 2000 and TB cases are now falling by 6 percent annually.

-- TB control programs in three other high burden countries -- the Philippines, Myanmar and Cambodia -- are making strong headway and within reach of the 2005 targets.


The steady expansion of DOTS at country level since 1993 has been accompanied by the creation of new international structures that have greatly improved co-ordination of TB strategy, operations, research and funding at the global level.

-- The global Stop TB Partnership, launched by WHO in 1998, has

grown to more than 250 members, including donor institutions

like the World Bank, foundations, NGOs, universities, and

organizations represented by George Soros George Soros

Born in Budapest, Hungary, in 1930, George Soros is considered by many to be one of the world's greatest investors. A famous hedge fund manager, Soros managed the Quantum Fund, a fund that achieved an average annual return of 30% from 1970-2000.
 and Bill Gates (person) Bill Gates - William Henry Gates III, Chief Executive Officer of Microsoft, which he co-founded in 1975 with Paul Allen. In 1994 Gates is a billionaire, worth $9.35b and Microsoft is worth about $27b. .

-- The Global Drug Facility, an innovative mechanism operated by

the Partnership to ensure access to TB drugs for low-income

countries, has already made grants for 1.8 million TB patient

treatments since its launch on World TB Day in 2001. It has

also reduced the cost of TB drugs by 30% to less than $10 for

a full treatment.

-- The Green Light Committee, which assists country programs to

treat multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB MDR-TB Multi-Drug Resistant Tuberculosis ), has reduced the cost of

second-line TB drugs by more than 95 percent through

negotiations with the pharmaceutical industry.

-- The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria

(GFATM GFATM Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria ) has devoted nearly US $250 million in funding during

its first two years to TB control programs in 16 of the 22

high burden countries.

-- Most important, Stop TB partners have a shared strategic

vision - the Global Plan to Stop TB. A unique document

developed by 150 experts around the world, it sets clear

targets with required inputs and measurable outcomes to cut

the global TB burden in half by 2010 relative to 2000 levels.

Notes to editors

1. Images of TB patients can be downloaded from the Stop TB Image Library at http://stoptb.lpipserver.com/ or by contacting Gary Hampton on +33 677842724 (mob), email: ghampton@iuatld.org. For World TB Day b-roll of patients in South-East Asia South-East Asia nle Sud-Est asiatique

South-East Asia south nSüdostasien nt

South-East Asia n
, South Asia This article is about the geopolitical region in Asia. For geophysical treatments, see Indian subcontinent.
South Asia, also known as Southern Asia
, Africa and Europe please contact WHO Audiovisual unit: Marion Lindsay, on +41 79 475 5512 (mob), email: lindsaym@who.int

2. The Stop TB Partnership was established by WHO in 1998 as a broad-based social movement to combat TB. In 2001 the Partnership launched the Global Plan to Stop TB, which aims to identify 70 percent of all people with infectious TB globally and ensure that 85 percent of those detected are successfully treated by the end of 2005. Over 250 organisations are now signed up to the Partnership.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Date:Mar 24, 2003
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