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African Business Leaders on Health: GBC Conference on TB, HIV-TB Co-infection & Global Fund Partnership Johannesburg, October 11, 2010. The state of Global TB: the Problem, Progress to date and future challenges Paul Nunn, WHO. Contents. The state of global TB Goals, targets and achievements
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African Business Leaders on Health: GBC Conference on TB, HIV-TB Co-infection & Global Fund PartnershipJohannesburg, October 11, 2010 The state of Global TB: the Problem, Progress to date and future challenges Paul Nunn, WHO
Contents • The state of global TB • Goals, targets and achievements • WHO's role in addressing TB • Possible roles of business in addressing TB
Estimated number of cases Estimated number of deaths 1.8 million (range 1.6–2.3 million) 9.4 million (range 8.9–9.9 million) All forms of TB HIV-associated TB 1.4 million (15%) (1.3–1.6 million) 520,000 (0.45–0.62 million) 440,000 (0.39-0.51 million) Multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) 150,000 (0.05–0.27 million) The Global Burden of Tuberculosis, 2008
West Pacific 20% Africa 31% Americas 3% SE Asia 34% East Mediterranean 7% Europe 5% Estimated TB incidence rates, 200895% of cases and 98% of deaths are in developing countries
Why TB is a business problem • 1% of South Africa's population gets TB each year • Other countries in Southern Africa about the same
The goals of TB care and control • Save the lives and health of those with TB • Prevent transmission of infection
TB Control Global Targets 2015: Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases Target 8: to have halted by 2015 and begun to reverse the incidence… Indicator 23: incidence, prevalence and deaths associated with TB Indicator 24: proportion of TB cases detected and cured under DOTS 2015: 50% reduction in TB prevalence and deaths by 2015 2050: elimination (<1 case per million population)
Achievements thus far • 36 million patients cured, 1995-2008 • 6 million deaths averted compared to 1995 care standards • Mortality reduced by 35% since 1990 • Cure rates >85% • 50% prevalence and mortality targets on track except Africa • MDG achieved: global TB incidence peaked in 2004 • But…. TB incidence declining too slowly, case detection stagnating, and MDR-TB care only now starting scale-up
10000 1000 TB incidence 10x lower than today, but >100x higher than elimination target in 2050 Incidence/million/yr 100 10 Elimination 16%/yr Elimination target: 1 / million / year by 2050 Global Plan 6%/yr Current trajectory 1%/yr 1 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 Year Full implementation of Global Plan: 2015 MDG target reached but TB not eliminated by 2050 Current rate of decline
WHO core functions in global TB control and research • Development of policy, norms and standards • Technical support to countries and its coordination • Monitoring & evaluation • Fostering partnerships including with civil society • Promoting research Focus on key priorities in each area given constrained resources
The global response: Stop TB Strategy & Global Plan • Pursue high-quality DOTS expansion • Address TB-HIV, MDR-TB, and needs of the poor and vulnerable • Contribute to health system strengthening • Engage all care providers • Empower people with TB and communities • Enable and promote research To save lives, prevent suffering, protect the vulnerable, & promote human rights
What are the challenges in 2010 to reach elimination? • Core TB business: quality variable and funding not secure • Case detection: still 63%, late diagnosis • TB/HIV impact in Africa: progress but not enough • MDR-TB in former USSR, China etc: very slow response • Health policies, systems and services: weak, no UHC • Socio-economic determinants and risk factors: how to tackle? • Non-state practitioners: low standards, irrational drug use • Communities: un-aware, un-involved, not mobilised • Research: finally new diagnostics, but underfunded
Innovative action needed in 4 spheres"Moving beyond the TB box" • Early & increased case detection • Scale-up TB/HIV and MDR-TB interventions • M&E and impact measurement • Engage all care providers and communities • Active screening among at-risk populations • Introduction of modern technology • Target new tools • Operational research and transfer of technology
Possible roles of business in • TB care, prevention and control • Work-force TB diagnosis and care programmes to increase case detection • TB screening in high risk workforce, eg mining • Corporate support of national or local TB control programmes • Private provision of diagnosis, care, prevention etc • Pathfinders in introduction of new, proven technologies
Possible roles of business in • TB and the development agenda • Advocate with government for political commitment to TB • Help mobilise civil society, including private sector • Fight stigma • Health policies and systems • Ensure regulated quality of drug manufacture, provision of private care
Possible roles of business in • Research and development • Develop new drugs, diagnostics and vaccines • Engage collaboratively with others in eg development of multi-drug regimens
Conclusion • Building on successes to date, WHO and the Stop TB Partnership are open to supporting business to do more to stimulate better TB care, prevention and control