New report shows devastating effect of COVID-19 pandemic on TB response
6.3 million more people ill with TB and 1.4 million more TB deaths by 2025; Length of quarantine, movement restrictions and disruption of TB services could spell disaster for hundreds of thousands at risk.
May 6 2020, Geneva, Switzerland - A new report released today
finds that the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic is
having unintended yet drastic consequences on tuberculosis (TB)
services, with lockdowns and limitations on diagnosis, treatment
and prevention services expected to increase the annual number
of TB cases and deaths over the next five years; at least five
years of progress on TB response will be lost. The modeling
analysis released by the Stop TB Partnership shows that under a
three-month lockdown and a protracted 10-month restoration of
services, the world could see an additional 6.3 million cases of
TB between 2020 and 2025 and an additional 1.4 million TB deaths
during that same period.
“We never learn from mistakes. For the past five years,
TB, a respiratory disease, has remained the biggest infectious
disease killer because the ‘TB agenda’ consistently
became less visible in front of other priorities,” said Dr
Lucica Ditiu, Executive Director of the Stop TB Partnership.
“Today, governments face a torturous path, navigating
between the imminent disaster of COVID-19 and the long-running
plague of TB. But choosing to ignore TB again would erase at
least half a decade of hard-earned progress against the
world’s most deadly infection and make millions more
people sick.”
The new study was commissioned by the Stop TB Partnership in
collaboration with the Imperial College, Avenir Health and Johns
Hopkins University, and was supported by USAID. The modeling was
constructed on assumptions drawn from a
rapid assessment
done by The Stop TB Partnership on the impact of the COVID-19
pandemic and related measures on the TB response in 20
high-burden TB countries—representing 54% of the global TB
burden.
The modeling focused on three high burden countries—India,
Kenya, and Ukraine—and extrapolated estimates from those
countries to create global estimates of the impact of COVID-19
on TB. The authors note that the model can be replicated in any
other country and that the findings can be used by countries for
data-driven decisions and financial requests.
TB is a forgotten respiratory disease that still kills 1.5
million people each year, more than any other infectious
disease. Incidence and deaths due to TB have been declining
steadily over the last several years as a result of intensified
activities by high burden countries to find people with TB early
and provide appropriate treatment.
In the 2018, during the UN General Assembly (UNGA) High-Level
Meeting on TB, Heads of States and governments committed to
significantly scale up the TB response. In 2018, this resulted
in identifying an additional 600,000 people who could access TB
care. In 2019, we also saw very promising progress. The COVID-19
pandemic, especially considering the mitigation measures put in
place, has proven to be a major setback in achieving the
UNGA targets, as TB case detection has dramatically fallen, treatments have
often been delayed and the risk of interruption of treatment and
potential increase of people with drug-resistant TB has
increased.
According to the new study, with a three-month lockdown and a
protracted 10-month restoration of services, global TB incidence
and deaths in 2021 would increase to levels last seen in between
2013 and 2016 respectively, implying a setback of at least five
to eight years in the fight against TB.
To minimize the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on TB, save
millions of lives and get the world back on track in achieving
the UNGA targets, national governments need to take immediate
measures that ensure the continuity of TB diagnostic, treatment
and prevention services during the lockdown period and undertake
a massive catch-up effort to actively diagnose, trace, treat and
prevent TB.
Stop TB Partnership and partners call upon the leadership of all
countries—particularly those with high TB burdens—to
ensure the continuity of the TB response in the time of
COVID-19, to take proactive measures that include those who are
most vulnerable and to provide protection against economic
hardship, isolation, stigma and discrimination. We urge
governments to secure the human and financial resources needed
for seamless continuation of TB services amid the COVID-19
response.
Recognizing that this is an unprecedented situation, the Stop TB
Partnership is continuing support for national TB Programmes and
partners through its multiple technical, innovative and
people-centered platforms. To ensure access to TB and COVID-19
resources, the Stop TB Partnership is sharing actions,
experiences and recommendations from countries and partners
through a dedicated
TB and COVID-19 webpage
and has recently published
interactive maps
with TB and COVID-19 situations in countries.
Source:
Stop TB Partnership