WHO: Promoting research on the interlinkages between COVID-19 and TB
05 June 2020 | Geneva - The World Health Organization (WHO) Global TB Programme is pleased to share a compendium of key resources to facilitate knowledge sharing and promote research on the interlinkages between tuberculosis (TB) and COVID-19. Given similar disease presentation between TB and COVID-19, and the adverse impact of this pandemic on TB services and health outcomes, knowledge sharing is important for a timely response to the dual threat of COVID-19 and TB.
“This compendium will be an important resource for
implementers, researchers, funders, civil society and policy
makers to build on lessons learned and strengthen preparedness
to mitigate the impact of outbreaks like COVID-19 on the
millions ill with TB as well as national TB programmes,”
said Dr Tereza Kasaeva, Director of WHO’s Global TB
Programme. “Importantly it presents a clear overview of
the TB/COVID-19 research landscape, enabling researchers and
funding institutions to better prioritize and deploy their time
and resources”.
The compendium includes a digital library of publications on TB
and COVID-19, as well as a database of ongoing research projects
and clinical trials, directly reported by investigators from
different parts of the world. The latter was developed
through an ongoing
survey
that opened last month. The WHO Collaborating Centre for TB and
Lung Disease in Tradate, Italy, is also supporting the Global TB
Programme to gather and review data on the clinical course of
disease of COVID-19 patients with TB.
All these resources will remain living documents that will be
updated regularly to facilitate knowledge sharing and
collaboration.
“There is a risk that the hard-earned gains of the TB
response will be lost if we don’t adapt to the new
normal” added Dr. Matteo Zignol, Unit Head a.i.
Prevention, Diagnosis, Treatment, Care and Innovation, WHO
Global TB Programme. “We need evidence-based approaches on
how TB programmes in different contexts can adapt to, and where
appropriate, leverage resources, to deliver better care to
people with TB.”
For more information,
please click here.
Source:
WHO