On May 19, 2014, the 67th World Health Assembly (WHA) adopted WHO’s “Global strategy and targets for tuberculosis prevention, care and control after 2015”. This post-2015 global tuberculosis strategy, labelled the End TB Strategy, was shaped during the past 2 years. A wide range of stakeholders—from ministries of health and national tuberculosis programmes to technical and scientifi c institutions, fi nancial and development partners, civil society and health activists, non-governmental organisations, and the private sector—contributed to its development. The strategy has a vision of making the world free of tuberculosis, with zero deaths, disease, and suff ering due to the disease (see appendix p 1 for summary of the End TB Strategy). In 2013, 9 million people fell ill with tuberculosis and 1·5 million died; about a quarter of them were HIV positive. Poor and deprived groups also bore the brunt of the enormous socioeconomic burden imposed by the disease and deaths. Concerned by this persistent human suff ering due to tuberculosis, but encouraged by the progress achieved during the past two decades and recognising the need to mount a multisectoral response to eff ectively address the problem, the health ministers at the WHA approved WHO’s proposal to push the limit of ambition to “end the global tuberculosis epidemic” by 2035, marked by well defi ned milestones and targets set along the way. Ending the tuberculosis epidemic implies bringing the levels of tuberculosis in the whole world down to converge with those already attained by many rich countries: fewer than ten new tuberculosis cases occurring per 100 000 population per year amounting to 90% reduction in tuberculosis incidence and tuberculosis deaths reduced by 95%. The rich countries achieved remarkable reductions in the tuberculosis burden not only by delivering adequate tuberculosis services, but also by pursuing universal access to health care and social protection while rapidly improving nutrition and economic conditions. Ending the tuberculosis epidemic in high-incidence countries needs a similar approach that guarantees access to high-quality tuberculosis care and prevention to all while simul taneously addressing the social determinants of tuberculosis. To this eff ect, elimination of catastrophic costs that tuberculosis-aff ected families face is an important milestone to be achieved under the End TB Strategy well within the next decade. Importantly, though, achievement of universal access to currently available methods of tuberculosis care and prevention will not be enough to end the epidemic within two decades. Global investments and eff orts are also essential to develop improved methods to diagnose, treat, and prevent tuberculosis. Equal emphasis on achievement of universal access to tuberculosis care and prevention, addressing of weaknesses in health systems and social determinants of tuberculosis, and pursuing of research and innovation for improved approaches and strategies constitute the core of the End TB Strategy. The achievements of the past two decades provide the basis for further progress. The DOTS (directly observed treatment, short-course) strategy of 1995 expanded access to high-quality tuberculosis care. The Stop TB Strategy of 2006 widened its scope to address management of all forms of tuberculosis including HIV-associated and drug-resistant tuberculosis, through engagement of communities, involvement of all care providers, strengthening of health systems, and fostering of research. Subsequently, the tuberculosis-related Millennium Development Goal to “halt and begin to reverse the incidence of tuberculosis” was achieved; 37 million lives were saved between 2000 and 2013; and a new rapid molecular test to simultaneously diagnose tuberculosis and rifampicin resistance was developed and two novel drugs were introduced. These achievements notwithstanding, the enormity of the task ahead cannot be overemphasised. Overall, the current 2% annual reduction in the global tuberculosis incidence is too slow to achieve an end to the epidemic in the foreseeable future. Tuberculosis remains a top infectious killer of men and women. A third of estimated incident tuberculosis cases go un-notifi ed or undiagnosed and close to half a million multidrug-resistant cases emerge each year. HIV-associated tuberculosis aff ects more than a million people a year. An estimated 2 billion people with latent tuberculosis infection form a reservoir that sustains the global epidemic. Analyses of constraints to global tuberculosis control bring four major persisting barriers to the fore. First, weak health systems including the unregulated non-state sector prevent reaching the currently available methods of diagnosis and treatment to all sections of the populations and a lack of universal health coverage and social protection inhibit provision of comprehensive tuberculosis care and prevention without further impoverishment to those who need it most. Second, determinants such as poverty, under nutrition, migration, and ageing populations enhance vulnerability and maintain the cycle of infection and disease. The risk of tuberculosis is further enhanced by non-communicable health problems such as diabetes, harmful use of alcohol, and tobacco smoking. Third, the lack of optimum methods—a point-of-care test for rapid diagnosis of disease and latent infection; better and safer drug regimens to shorten treatment; and a vaccine to prevent Lancet 2015; 385: 1799–801
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