What is missing from the UN Political Declaration on TB?
The Declaration falls short in its response to the leading infectious killer worldwide and the leading cause of death for people with HIV around the world.
(New York, September 26, 2018) — Today, UN Member States will come together at the UN Headquarters in New York City for the first “High Level Meeting” on TB, where countries will ratify a political declaration on tuberculosis (TB). Despite pressure, and securing several concrete pledges on expanding service delivery, the declaration falls short in its response to the leading infectious killer worldwide and the leading cause of death for people with HIV around the world. In order to have a meaningful impact on the TB epidemic, finally confront an infectious disease killing 4,500 people per day, and get serious about ending TB as a global epidemic, here is what the political declaration should have said:
-------
“Tuberculosis is a global emergency that kills over one and a half million people every year. It is the leading killer of people with HIV. Yet, collectively we have failed to respond effectively to TB, because it mainly affects poor people including criminalised and marginalised communities such as people who use drugs, prisoners and their communities. We recognise our collective and individual failures. With this declaration we make it clear that the old ways are not and never were good enough.
We commit to putting the money needed for TB research and for TB programmes on the table.
We commit to implementing and aggressively scaling up access to the latest evidence-based health technologies and policies in our countries. In short, we commit to ensuring that every single person who has TB receives the best available testing, treatments, and support – irrespective of their ability to pay or in which country they may live. In pursuit of this goal, we place human rights, and particularly the right to health, ahead of private interests and short-term political considerations.
In particular, we will take the following concrete steps:
-
Implement all World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines
relating to the diagnosis, prevention, treatment and care of
TB immediately but no later than six months after
publication of such guidelines. We will ensure the rapid
rollout of lifesaving new diagnostics such as LAM testing,
and better and safer medicines such as bedaquiline. We
commit to stop using medicines that do not work, or worsen
health outcomes for people with TB.
-
Establish ambitious national coverage and mortality
reduction targets that ensure a bold scale up of national
efforts to address TB. These targets must be reflected in
national strategic plans developed by countries in order to
ensure effective accountability. These targets should
include a) a reduction in mortality by 75% by 2025; b) a
reduction in new infections by 50% by 2025; c) that 90% of
people with TB will be diagnosed using WHO recommended rapid
diagnostics by 2023; and d) that 90% of people with TB are
able to access treatment by 2023 including newer, better and
safer regimens for people with drug-resistant TB.
-
Commit to raising the money needed to close the funding gap
to ensure a comprehensive response to the TB crisis, as
outlined in the WHO Global Tuberculosis Report 2018. In
2018, investments in TB prevention and care in low- and
middle-income countries fell US$ 3.5 billion short of what
is needed. The annual gap will widen to US$ 5.4 billion in
2020 unless additional funding is committed. We will work
collectively to establish an equitable funding formula for
additional funds needed based primarily on countries’,
including donor countries’, ability to pay.
-
Invest at least 0.1% of our national gross expenditure on
research and development (GERD) on TB research starting 2019
and we will continue with TB research investment at least
this level until 2030. It is only through such a concrete,
measurable commitment that we will ensure the annual US$ 2
billion that is required for TB research. We will ensure
that TB health technologies developed with public and
charitable funds will be equitably and affordably accessible
to people with TB globally. We commit to ensure that
publicly funded TB clinical trials include pregnant women,
children, and people taking other treatments for HIV and
other diseases and conditions. We commit to ensuring that
better, more tolerable treatment regimens and
co-formulations are developed at product development
stages.
-
Implement the recommendation of the United Nations
Secretary General’s High-Level Panel on Access to
Medicines and establish, before the end of 2019, a binding
convention on the research and development of critically
needed health technologies for TB and other areas of urgent
public health need. We commit to making annual financial
contributions to a fund that will be established through the
convention. We commit that no exclusive rights, in the form
of intellectual property or any other means, will be granted
on any products resulting from research funded through the
convention.
-
We will, each country individually, by 2021, adopt, use,
and protect the public health flexibilities available under
the World Trade Organization (WTO) TRIPS Agreement as
clarified by the Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and
Public Health of 2001. We will raise the bar for
patentability (excluding new uses, new forms, and new
formulations of existing health technologies from
patentability) and set up easy-to-use compulsory and
government use licensing procedures with wide grounds for
the issuing such licenses. Least developed countries will
adopt the pharmaceutical transition period until 2033 or
such time as they are no longer an LDC in accordance with
the extension period allowed under WTO rules. We will, each
country, refrain from any and all efforts in trade
agreements or otherwise to impose TRIPS-plus measures or to
retaliate or threaten to retaliate against other countries
for using such measures.
-
We will, all high-TB burden countries individually, ensure
rapid registration of TB health technologies. We commit to
do this by making better use of the WHO’s
Collaborative Registration system in order to speed up
national registration processes, and, by facilitating and
incentivising broad and expedited registration of TB
medicines, diagnostics, and vaccines by originators and
generic producers.
-
We will, all high-TB-burden countries individually with the
financial support of wealthy countries, fully fund
aggressive contact tracing and active case finding campaigns
in all high-burden countries to find the “missing
people” with TB and ensure that TB is diagnosed and
treated earlier, and implement programmes to ensure people
are supported through treatment better. This will not only
support the health of people with TB but also reduce the
spread of TB in our communities. We commit to hiring the
adequate numbers of health workers needed to scale up these
campaigns in order to reduce TB mortality, and we agree to
motivate them with a living wage, the tools and training
they need to do their work, and the infection control they
require.
-
We will, all high-TB burden countries individually and with
the financial support of wealthy countries, conduct annual
audits of TB infection control in all healthcare facilities,
prisons and other public buildings where people gather in
our countries. We commit to making the detailed results of
these audits publicly available together with turnaround
plans based on the challenges identified to address
shortcomings in infection control.
-
Commit to ensuring that community members affected by TB
are engaged and participate fully in the development and
implementation of TB policies and programming, including
through financially and otherwise supporting TB prevention
and treatment literacy campaigns and other community
mobilisation efforts.
-
We call on Peter Sands, the Executive Director of the
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria to
launch immediately a reprogramming and fundraising
initiative to ensure high-TB burden countries modify their
Global Fund-funded TB and TB-HIV programs to reflect the
newest WHO treatment and prevention guidelines rather than
old and outmoded approaches.
- We call on the US Congress to urgently scale up funding for the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to support expansion of life saving TB and TB-HIV programming around the world, including by scaling up access to GeneXpert, aggressively expanding LAM testing, ensuring access to better and safer TB health technologies, and through funding the bold expansion of contact tracing and active case finding campaigns.”
Issued by:
Health Global Access Project (Health GAP)
Global Coalition of TB Activists (GCTA)
The Global Tuberculosis Community Advisory Board (TB CAB)
International Treatment Preparedness Coalition (ITPC)
The Kenya Legal & Ethical Issues Network on HIV and
AIDS (KELIN)
SECTION27
Treatment Action Campaign (TAC)
Treatment Action Group (TAG)
Source:
Health GAP