|  
              Launch 
                of the WHO Global Tuberculosis Control Report 2010 
                Geneva 
                -- November 11, 2010 -- The World Health Organization today issued 
                its most comprehensive report ever on the progress being made 
                in combating the tuberculosis (TB) epidemic. The publication contains 
                the very latest data, and for the first time also includes online 
                profiles from 212 countries and territories. 
 "The findings in the Global Tuberculosis Control 2010 publication 
                confirm that when WHO's best practices are put in place, and with 
                the right amount of funding and commitments from governments, 
                we can turn the tide on the TB epidemic," said Dr Mario Raviglione, 
                Director of the WHO Stop TB Department. "Since 1995, we have 
                seen considerable improvements in the quality of TB care, and 
                these improvements are having a positive impact in some of the 
                world's poorest countries. Since 1995, 41 million people have 
                been cured and 6 million lives have been saved. These are major 
                successes that have been achieved largely without any 'magic bullet'."
 
 "However, with 1.7 million people dying from tuberculosis 
                last year -- including 380,000 women, many of whom were young 
                mothers -- these successes are far too fragile. No government 
                is doing too much in TB. Commitments are being short-changed. 
                If governments are genuinely committed to stopping TB, they must 
                seize all the opportunities that are available right now and all 
                the opportunities that may come in the near future."
 
 Among the successes highlighted in the report are:
 
                 
                  |  | TB 
                    mortality -- there has been a 35% drop in the TB death rate 
                    since 1990 -- from a rate of 30 in 1990 to 20 per 100,000 
                    population in 2009. |   
                  |  | TB 
                    Incidence -- Rate per capita per 100,000 of people sick with 
                    TB continues declining slowly. |   
                  |  | 2015 
                    Global Targets -- The world is on track to reach Millennium 
                    Development Goal for TB incidence, and the Stop TB Partnership 
                    2015 target for mortality. |   
                  |  | Quality 
                    of Care -- there has been major progress in improving access 
                    to diagnosis and treatment, and also in the scale up of TB/HIV 
                    intervention [and] laboratory strengthening |  Major 
                challenges still exist: 
                 
                  |  | Deaths 
                    -- 1.7 million died in 2009 from what is a curable disease |   
                  |  | Incidence 
                    -- though falling, it is falling too slowly. Under the current 
                    rate of decline, TB will not be eliminated in our lifetime. |   
                  |  | MDR-TB 
                    response -- the response is still insufficient and more efforts 
                    are needed to scale up and strengthen programs, especially 
                    with 440,000 new cases emerging each year, and that less than 
                    5% of those cases being properly treated. |  
 
                 
                  |  |   
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                        | Left 
                          to right: Dr Stefan H. E. Kaufmann, Director, Max Planck 
                          Institute for Infection Biology; Dr Robert Loddenkemper, 
                          Secretary General, German Central Committee Against 
                          Tuberculosis; Ms Gudrun Kopp, Parliamentary State Secretary, 
                          Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development 
                          (BMZ); Dr Mario Raviglione, Director, Stop TB Department, 
                          World Health Organizatio |  |  11/19/10 Sources World 
              Health Organization. Global 
              Tuberculosis Control 2010.  World 
              Health Organization. Launch of the WHO Global Tuberculosis Control 
              Report 2010. Press release. November 11, 2010. T Kahn. 
              Global Body Begins TB Drug Trials. Business Day. November 
              11, 2010.                                     |