World TB Day 2021: WHO advocacy and communications toolkit
The Clock Is Ticking
Every day counts to
save more lives
11 March 2021 | In just fourteen days, millions around the
globe will come together to commemorate World TB Day on 24
March. The theme of World TB Day 2021 - ‘The Clock is
Ticking’ – conveys the sense that the world is
running out of time to act on the commitments to end TB made by
global leaders. This is especially critical in the context of
the COVID-19 pandemic that has put End TB progress at risk, and
to ensure equitable access to prevention and care in line with
WHO’s drive towards achieving Universal Health
Coverage.
On World TB Day, the World Health Organization (WHO)
is calling for action on several fronts to ensure that the
commitments made to end TB are achieved:
-
Countries are urged to
implement
ten priority recommendations outlined in the 2020 progress report on TB issued by the United Nations
Secretary-General António Guterres and developed with
WHO support. The report stressed that high-level commitments and
targets have galvanized global and national progress towards
ending TB, but urgent and more ambitious investments and
actions are required, especially in the context of the
COVID-19 pandemic. WHO is urging countries to implement
the ten priority recommendations from the report to put
the world on track to reach agreed targets by 2022 and
beyond.
-
Essential TB services should be sustained during the
COVID-19 pandemic to ensure that gains made in the fight
against TB are not reversed. All measures should be taken to ensure continuity of services
for people who need preventive and curative treatment for TB,
including during emergencies such as the COVID-19 pandemic.
People-centred delivery of TB prevention, diagnosis, treatment
and care services, including through digital technologies,
should be ensured in tandem with the COVID-19 response.
-
Tackling health inequities is vital to ensure health for
all. The COVID-19 pandemic has drawn attention to the deep
disparities that persist between and within countries, some of
which are being exacerbated and risk widening even further.
People with TB are among the most marginalized and vulnerable,
facing barriers in accessing care. In alignment with
World Health Day, 7 April 2021, WHO is calling for global
action to address health inequities for people with TB and
other diseases.
-
Systematic screening should be scaled-up to help reach all
people with TB prevention and care. It is estimated that close to three million people with TB
are not diagnosed or reported annually around the world.
Improved TB screening using new tools and approaches to reach
all people with care could help bridge this gap. Systematic
screening is critical to ensure we can detect TB early in the
people who need it, while also identifying people who could
benefit from TB preventive treatment. WHO is releasing
new guidelines on TB systematic screening along with an accompanying operational guide on
22 March.
- Ending TB requires concerted action by all sectors to provide the right services, support and enabling safe environment in the right place, at the right time. Everyone has a role to play in ending TB – individuals, communities, businesses, governments, societies.
“We are running out of time to fulfil global commitments
to end TB. Even as we battle COVID-19, we must not ease up the
fight against TB but redouble efforts to save more lives and end
suffering,” said Dr Tereza Kasaeva, Director of
WHO’s Global TB Programme. “We need political will
and accountability, financial resources, engagement from all
sectors, and community ownership, and we need this now. The
clock is ticking!”
WHO has developed an advocacy and communications package to
support awareness building and drive action across all
levels, in the lead up to and on World TB Day. You can
access the package
here.
Source:
WHO