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But this day also demands sober reflection on what remains to be done to stop people from dying from TB and why, more than ever, we must “Unite to End TB.” Two billion people – one fourth of the world’s population – are infected with TB, with more than 10 million becoming ill with the disease each year. TB is now the number one infectious disease killer worldwide – the same as it was in the 19th century before anti-TB drugs were available to combat the disease. The real tragedy of this leading killer, however, is that TB is preventable as well as curable with early detection and effective treatment.
The world is also facing the growing threat of drug-resistant TB – new forms of the disease that are resistant to our best anti-TB drugs. Multi-drug resistant TB (MDR TB), and the even more deadly extensively drug-resistant TB, are costly to treat, difficult to cure, and often lead to death. Add to this the fact that drug-resistant TB has spread to every country in the world. We at CDC continue to be committed to confronting this challenge.
Along with our global partners, CDC experts focus on a distinct set of issues as part of the effort to alleviate the toll that TB takes.
The human and economic costs of inaction are too high for us to falter in our efforts to address TB and drug-resistant TB. According to a recent analysis, if substantive progress isn’t made in detecting and treating drug-resistant TB, there will be 75 million additional deaths by 2050 at a cost to the global economy of $17 trillion.
CDC experts remain committed to using rigorous science and quality disease surveillance techniques to find, cure, and prevent TB around the world. To end TB, we must continue to work together to fight this epidemic on multiple fronts, and to stop the suffering associated with this disease, here at home and around the world.
We invite you to partner with us in this life-saving work. Please find additional resources (e.g., fact sheets, infographics, and social media cards) that highlight the ways CDC is working to find, cure, and prevent TB worldwide.
Sincerely,
/Rebecca Martin/
Rebecca Martin, PhD
Director, Center for Global Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention www.cdc.gov/global
/Shannon Hader/
Shannon Hader, MD, MPH
Director, Division of Global HIV & TB Center for Global Health Centers for Disease Control and Prevention www.cdc.gov/globalhivtb |
International Journal for Equity in Health
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