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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 16
March 2005
Press Release No: L/10/2005
SECRETARY-GENERAL CALLS
FOR BROAD MOBILIZATION OF RESOURCES
IN FIGHT AGAINST TB, IN MESSAGE ON WORLD DAY
Following is Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s
message on World TB Day, observed 24 March:
Five thousand people die from tuberculosis every
day, although the disease is both preventable and curable. Clearly,
we must work harder if we are to achieve, by 2015, the Millennium
Development Goal of halting and beginning to reverse the spread
of TB as one of the world’s major diseases. Thanks to
a massive scale-up of the DOTS strategy for TB control recommended
by the World Health Organization, with 17 million persons treated
in nine years, our prospects for reaching the Goal have improved
greatly.
WHO reports that eight in 10 patients are successfully
treated under DOTS programmes, and that 45 per cent of infectious
patients were treated in 2003 -- up from 28 per cent in 2000.
But huge obstacles remain, particularly in Africa -- in the
form of weak health systems, a depleted health workforce, and
an HIV/AIDS epidemic that is driving TB. As Nelson Mandela said,
“We cannot win the battle against AIDS if we do not also
fight TB. TB is too often a death sentence for people with AIDS.”
I urge African leaders to make the fight against both diseases
a priority.
The Stop TB Partnership, with its 350 partner
governments and organizations, is making a difference by forging
consensus on strategies, coordinated responses, mechanisms for
quality drug supply, and action for new diagnostics, drugs and
vaccines. Governments, bilateral agencies, the Global Fund to
Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, and the World Bank are providing
more resources. Still, to achieve worldwide impact, more is
needed. And we must provide greater support for the increasingly
wide range of caregivers who help find people ill with TB and
assist them with treatment. These providers include not just
public health doctors and nurses, but also community leaders,
former patients, women’s groups, and many others.
Such broad mobilization is our strongest weapon
in the fight against the disease. On this world TB Day, let
us rededicate ourselves to that mission.
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