Home > News > world-news

Continue fighting TB: Ban

New York, Mar 24 : Significant advances have been made in the fight against tuberculosis, with nearly 6 million people saved in the past 15 years, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Wednesday, calling for the momentum to be maintained in the fight against the deadly disease.

"The world is on trace to reverse the spread of this airborne killer," Ban said in a message to mark World Tuberculosis Day, paying tribute to the many heath care providers and advocates around the world who have helped to treat and cure 36 million people since 1995.

The theme of this year's Day is "On the move against tuberculosis," and he said that there is movement in many areas against the disease.

Thanks to public awareness campaigns, communities are now much more aware of TB, while funding to combat it continues to grow through the United Nations-backed Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, among other mechanisms.

Further, the World Health Organization (WHO) is helping to coordinate technical support as the disease continues to evolve, while Joint UN Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) seeks to boost awareness of the interlinked epidemics of TB and HIV.

"But progress should never distract us from the challenges," the Secretary-General underscored in his message. "The numbers are still staggering."

Last year, nearly 2 million people died from TB, making it the second biggest infectious killer of adults around the world. It is also one of the top three killers of women of reproductive age.

Rates of new illness are falling in all regions, but not in all countries, Ban pointed out. "Overall, rates of decline are far slower than needed."

He also warned that lapses in control are pushing rates of multidrug-resistant TB, for which treatment is more costly and difficult.

"In this day and age, no one should be dying from TB," the Secretary-General underlined.

A new WHO report issued last week found that drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB) is now at record levels, with Asia bearing the brunt of the epidemic, calling for better diagnosis of the disease.

In some parts of the world, one in four people with TB becomes ill with a form of the disease that can no longer be treated with standard drugs, according to WHO's Multidrug and Extensively Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis: 2010 Global Report on Surveillance and Response.

Nearly one-third of the 440,000 people with multidrug-resistant form of the disease (MDR-TB) in 2008 died, it said.

Almost half of the MDR-TB cases occurred in China, where the first nationwide drug resistance survey was conducted, and India. In Africa, estimates show 69,000 cases emerged, the vast majority of which went undiagnosed.

--IBNS

Your Yearly Horoscope for 2011:

Pisces      Aquarius      Capricon      Sagittarius      Scorpio      Libra      Virgo      Leo      Cancer      Gemini      Taurus      Aries     

 

PLAY CLASSIC GAMES ONLINE

 

TOP READ ARTICLES:

Madonna touches her boobs in racy perfume ad
Jim Carrey to 'pop the question to Russian girlfriend'
Censor clears 'Titanic 3D' without cuts
Gilani's son in Rs.7 bn drug scam?
Ne-Yo wanted 'gentleman' type name for son
Gaga launches poster contest
'Detachment' bought back memories: Adrien Brody
Rihanna was a UFO spotter
Lionel Richie fears losing voice
Probation ends, Lindsay excited to play Taylor
Kim Kardashian says she'll always work hard to stay in shape
Lindsay Lohan thinks she's `perfect as Dame Elizabeth Taylor`
Britney Spears wants an end to conservatorship
'Single and satisfied` Katy Perry shoots down dating rumours
Lindsay Lohan admits personal problems were making career 'fall apart'