New data shows COVID-19 combined with funding shortfalls are devastating efforts to end TB by 2030
Less than half of required funding has been provided globally with dramatic consequences as hundreds of thousands more die from TB.
28 September 2021, Geneva, Switzerland – The Stop TB
Partnership today released new data showing how the COVID-19
pandemic and dismally low levels of funding represent the main
barriers to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development
Goals of ending TB by 2030. The data from 2021 shows that the
impact of COVID-19 on the TB response has continued to be
profound: 1.2 million fewer people have been diagnosed and
treated for TB in 2021 with four months still left in the
calendar year. Currently, only US$6.5 billion per annum is
available for the TB response globally, less than half of the
commitments made at the United Nations High-Level Meeting
(UNHLM) on TB.
The organization warned that getting the TB response back on
track will require at least a doubling of resources currently
being provided to the fight against the disease, including a
significant increase in the share of its resources the Global
Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria (The Global Fund)
allocates to TB.
“Years of chronic neglect have led to an unbearable
situation in which TB kills more than 4,000 people a day—
more than HIV and malaria combined—and still, too few
decision makers, donors and stakeholders care about TB,”
said
Dr. Lucica Ditiu, Executive Director of the Stop TB
Partnership. “It is not that we will see future consequences: we are
in the middle of the disaster, and our attention seems to be in
the very wrong place. Data from 2020 and 2021 will reveal soon
how hundreds of thousands of additional people are dying from TB
and how TB drug resistance and the TB epidemic itself are on the
rise.”
An estimated 5.7 million people received treatment for TB in
2020, a drop of 21% from the previous year—leaving an
estimated 4.3 million people with untreated TB and spelling all
but certain death for probably half that number.
“We always knew that ending TB by 2030 was going to be an
uphill battle, but COVID-19 and the reduced funding for TB have
sent us rolling further down the hill than anyone could have
expected,” added Ditiu.
Based on available TB notification data, the Stop TB Partnership
anticipates that the world will fail to achieve the 2018 United
National High-Level Meeting (UNHLM) on TB target of diagnosing
and treating 40 million people with TB in the period 2018-2022.
Global projections, based on data from 27 countries representing
around 73% of the global burden of TB, show that less than 85%
of this UNHLM target will be achieved.
“While 85% might sound like an achievement, what it means
in practice is that more than 5 million people with TB will be
left behind without treatment,” said Dr. Ditiu.
“Untreated TB translates into approximately a 50%
mortality rate, and those who survive will not only suffer the
consequences of the disease but will also spread TB to many
more, perpetuating the cycle of transmission.”
“The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has been severe,
reversing hard-won gains in the fight against TB. However, this
is not a moment to lose hope but to redouble commitments and
action for the sake of the millions who face immense suffering
and lose their lives to this preventable and curable disease.
The UN Secretary General with WHO has outlined priority
recommendations to ramp up the TB response. Efforts need to be
intensified to make these recommendations a reality," said
Dr. Tereza Kasaeva, Director of WHO’s Global TB
Programme.
Only around 20% of the UNHLM target of treating 115,000 children
with MDR-TB is expected to be achieved by 2022. When it comes to
TB prevention, less than 30% of the UNHLM target of putting 24
million contacts of people with TB on preventive therapy is
expected to be reached.
TB is curable, and TB interventions are some of the most
cost-effective of all public health interventions—every $1
invested in TB prevention and care yields a return of $43.
“No matter which way you slice it, spending more on TB is
one of the world’s best social investments,” said
Bjørn Lomborg, the President of the Copenhagen
Consensus Center.
The biggest external donor to TB programs—the Global
Fund—only allocates 18% of its resources to TB, even
though the disease causes more than half of the deaths from
diseases served by the Global Fund. In 2019, 1.4 million people
died from TB, more than HIV/AIDS (700,000 deaths) and malaria
(410,000 deaths) combined.
Of the currently available funds for the fight against TB, 85%
comes from domestic budgets. The remaining 15% is provided only
for two-thirds by The Global Fund. Low-and middle-income
countries (LMICs) remain heavily dependent on the Global Fund
for TB services, clearly putting the Global Fund under the
spotlight to significantly increase its funding portion to close
the huge gap.
“If we want to end the TB epidemic, people affected by TB
must be at the center of the response,” said
Austin Obiefuna, Executive Director of Afro Global Alliance
and incoming Vice-Chair of the Stop TB Partnership Board. “Countries must step up their efforts to conduct
assessments and develop action plans to transform their TB
response into one that is equitable, rights-based,
gender-transformative and people-centered.”
“Despite being one of the leading infectious disease
killers in the world, TB remains an orphan disease, never a
political priority and never high up on funding agendas. To
avoid further setbacks to the TB response, recover from losses
experienced over the past year, and ensure that the Global
Fund’s allocations are in line with TB’s share of
disease burden and deaths, the Global Fund’s financial
contribution for TB must be at least doubled,” Obiefuna
added.
The worrying state of the response to TB will also be discussed
at the Stop TB Partnership’s 34th virtual Board Meeting,
held from 28-30 September 2021 under the leadership of the Board
Chair, India’s Minister of Health and Family Welfare, Mr.
Mansukh Mandaviya. Progress towards achieving global targets to
end TB was also discussed at an event on the side lines of this
year’s United National General Assembly hosted by the
Russian Federation and the WHO.
Source:
Stop TB Partnership