12 months of COVID-19 eliminated 12 years of progress in the global fight against TB
Pandemic response pushed aside TB outreach and services, resulting in 20% drop in diagnosis and treatment worldwide, urgent recovery needed.
18 March 2021, Geneva, Switzerland – One
year after the COVID-19 pandemic turned the world on its head,
the Stop TB Partnership today shared new data showing that nine
of the countries with the most tuberculosis (TB)
cases—representing 60% of the global TB burden—saw a
drastic decline in diagnosis and treatment of TB infections in
2020, ranging from 16%-41% (with an average of 23%). The drop
brought the overall number of people diagnosed and treated for
TB in those countries to 2008 levels, a setback of 12 years.
“Twelve years of impressive gains in the fight against TB,
including in reducing the number of people who were missing from
TB care, have been tragically reversed by another virulent
respiratory infection,” said Dr. Lucica Ditiu, Executive
Director of the Stop TB Partnership. “In the process, we
put the lives and livelihoods of millions of people in jeopardy.
I hope that in 2021 we buckle up and we smartly address, at the
same time, TB and COVID-19 as two airborne diseases with similar
symptoms.”
In addition to the worldwide drop in TB diagnosis and treatment,
data emerging from India and South Africa shows that people
coinfected with TB and COVID-19 have three times higher
mortality than people infected with TB alone. This makes contact
tracing, case finding and bi-directional TB and COVID-19 testing
essential.
“After less than a year, a vaccine was developed and is
now being deployed to help contain, and hopefully end, the
COVID-19 pandemic,” said Thokozile Phiri Nkhoma, Stop TB
Partnership Board Member representing communities affected by
TB. “But although TB has been around since the time of the
pharaohs, the only approved vaccine is 100 years old and
doesn’t fully work, especially in adults. First-line TB
treatment for TB is several decades old, and drug resistance is
on the rise, while the millions of people with TB who are not
found and treated remain at risk of spreading the
disease.”
In May 2020, a
modelling study
conducted by Stop TB Partnership in collaboration with Imperial
College, Avenir Health, Johns Hopkins University and USAID
predicted the impact of COVID-19-related measures on TB. In the
study, the authors concluded that while stringent COVID-19
responses may only last months, they would have a lasting effect
on TB in high-burden settings, seen mainly through how they
limit outreach that focuses on TB diagnosis and treatment.
Projections showed that at the global level, a three-month
lockdown, followed by a protracted 10-month restoration could
lead to an additional 6.3 million cases of TB between 2020 and
2025 and an additional 1.4 million TB deaths during this time.
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 5 to 8 years in the fight against
TB due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Twelve months later, new data shows that the numbers are even
worse. The findings released today were determined by looking at
the diagnosis and treatment statistics for Bangladesh, India,
Indonesia, Myanmar, Pakistan, Philippines, South Africa,
Tajikistan, and Ukraine—nine countries that together
represent 60% of the global TB burden—and comparing data
from 2020 with 2019. In these countries TB diagnosis and
enrolment on treatment in 2020 declined by a total of 1 million,
ranging from 16%-41% (average 23%) in individual countries.
Urgent recovery needed
The TB programs of several high TB burden countries have made
efforts to recover. Some have been more successful than others.
India was one of the first countries where the dramatic decline
in TB notifications was seen—the national
government’s TB notification system,
“Nikshay,” reported a 70% drop between the 10th and 15th weeks of 2020. A high-level committee under
the chairmanship of the Indian Minister of Health developed a
rapid response plan by August 2020, with a primary goal of
integrating TB outreach into all COVID-19 programming, taking
advantage of how both infections attack people’s
respiratory systems.
“TB didn’t go anywhere when the COVID-19 pandemic
hit,” said Dr. Harsh Vardhan, Minister of Health and
Family Welfare, India. “People just got distracted, health
workers were redirected, and health systems became overwhelmed.
Recovery efforts succeed with political leadership and
substantial resources, along with an insistence that COVID-19
outreach and prevention efforts include TB work, instead of
replacing it.”
Boosted by a public commitment from the Prime Minister, efforts
to locate TB and COVID-19 cases in all health care facilities
intensified, and rapid molecular testing for TB expanded.
Bi-directional screening of TB and COVID-19 took place for
people displaying influenza-like illness and severe acute
respiratory infections. Contact tracing systems and testing for
TB linked to COVID-19 contact tracing were quickly set up.
Private sector TB care facilities were reopened, and digital
tools were rolled out to help patients stick to treatment
regimens, among other measures.
In the
data brief released today, the Stop TB Partnership calls for global
investment in TB outreach and treatment as response to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Further to this, the world needs to
strategically prepare for future airborne pandemics building on
the investments and strategies in TB response, including
infection control; bi-directional testing and contact tracing;
communities, civil society networks and primary health care as
diagnosis entry points; and expanding the laboratory networks to
support integrated approaches to tackling TB and COVID-19.
Source:
Stop TB Partnership