Global MPs urge heads of state to act on TB
Parliamentarians from around the world are calling for heads of state to bring the global TB epidemic to an end
NEW YORK (April 26, 2018) – In a statement released on Thursday, members of the Global TB Caucus, a group of more than 2,300 parliamentarians from 132 countries committed to ending tuberculosis (TB), called on world leaders to attend the U.N. General Assembly High Level Meeting (HLM) on TB and make meaningful commitments to address TB—now the world’s deadliest infectious disease.
In the statement, Caucus members urge world leaders to use the
HLM to commit to a “renewed effort to prevent, diagnose
and treat TB,” ensuring that the global response is
“equitable, rights-based and people-centred,” as
well as boosting “investment in the full spectrum of TB
research” to bring about urgently needed new tools
including drugs, diagnostics and vaccines. The HLM is being
co-sponsored by the nations of Japan and Antigua and Barbuda.
“It
is truly encouraging that we see the momentum already building
up by parliamentarian leaders whose role is critical to ending
TB." said H.E. Mr. Koro Bessho, Permanent Representative of
Japan to the United Nations.
The HLM is the first
ever meeting of its kind on TB and will take place on September
26, 2018 when many world leaders will be in New York for the
United Nations General Assembly. Campaigners are looking to the
HLM as a unique opportunity for world leaders to make the
specific and impactful commitments necessary to end the
tuberculosis epidemic, which was first labelled a Global Health
Emergency in 1993. Since then, the Global TB Caucus estimates
that as many as 50 million people have died from TB, and it has
become the leading infectious disease killer worldwide.
“Any
disease that claims the lives of millions of people deserves our
immediate attention,” said Dr. Aubrey Webson, Permanent
Representative of Antigua and Barbuda to the United Nations.
“My country is committed to wellness and healthcare in our
achievement of the 2030 agenda.”
TB is a
bacterial infection that is spread through the air. It is most
often found in the lungs but can exist in any organ in the body
and lie dormant for years. In 2016, 10.4 million people
developed TB and 1.7 million died of it. It has become
increasingly resistant to drug treatments, representing close to
1 in 3 deaths from antimicrobial resistance.
“The
HLM is a unique opportunity to raise the profile of an issue
which until now simply hasn’t commanded adequate attention
from global leaders,” said The Rt Hon Nick Herbert CBE MP
from the United Kingdom, who co-chairs the Global TB Caucus
along with South Africa’s Minister of Health Aaron
Motsolaedi. “TB needs this focus at the top level -
it’s the world’s deadliest infectious disease,
killing more people every year than AIDS and malaria combined.
Action to tackle this global catastrophe is long
overdue.”
Following through on these
commitments will require significant financial investments in
the fight against TB at both global and national levels. Last
year, TB care and prevention efforts were met with a $2.3
billion funding gap, while research and development funding to
develop new tools to detect, treat, and prevent TB faces an
annual shortfall of $1.2 billion.
Ending the TB
epidemic by 2030 is a target of the U.N.’s Sustainable
Development Goal 3: “Ensure healthy lives and promote
well-being for all at all ages.” Unless world leaders
agree on urgent actions to accelerate the current rate of
progress against TB, the Sustainable Development Goal target
could be missed by more than 100 years at a cost of over a
trillion dollars in lost economic output and countless millions
of lives.
About the Global TB Caucus
Member of
the Global TB Caucus are committed to accelerating progress
against the tuberculosis epidemic. Its efforts to marshal
support for the U.N. High Level Meeting on TB are supported by a
coalition of organizations including the ACTION Partnership,
ICSS, The Global Fund To Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria,
KNCV, Stop TB Partnership, TB Alliance, The Union, United
Nations Development Programme, and the World Health
Organization.
Source:
TB Alliance