The Other Pandemic: World Urged to Learn TB Lessons 

With the death toll soaring past 300,000 this year and a quarter of humanity now infected, the pandemic shows no signs of abating as it spreads invisibly throughout vulnerable communities.   Yet unlike the novel coronavirus, this disease is preventable, curable and centuries-old: tuberculosis.   On the occasion of Staff inspect medical equipments at an emergency hospital set up amid the new coronavirus outbreak in Jakarta, Indonesia, March 23, 2020.As of Tuesday 1100 GMT, there had been more than 386,350 confirmed COVID-19 cases, 16,961 of which have proved fatal.   World governments have taken unprecedented  peacetime measures to try to slow the spread.   Several European nations have announced country-wide lock downs as well as massive economic stimuli and financial support for businesses and workers.   Grania Brigden, TB director at The tuberculosis union, told AFP that testing capacity was crucial in tackling both diseases.   “With TB we’ve struggled with research and development investment to get good, accurate diagnostic tools and better treatment but actually we are there now,” she said.   “It goes to show that where there is political will things can happen and unfortunately in TB the political will has always been an issue.”  Several countries on the frontline of the TB war are seeing their treatment and testing services disrupted by COVID-19, further straining healthcare systems as the pandemic spreads.   Ventilators lie at the New York City Emergency Management Warehouse before being shipped out for distribution due to concerns over the rapid spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in the Brooklyn borough of New York City, March 24, 2020.COVID-19 is already affecting supply chains of all medicines and most equipment used to treat other infectious diseases such as face masks and antibiotics.   There is in particular growing concern among the global health community that COVID-19 could especially hit regions such as sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia where healthcare systems are woefully under equipped to deal with a spike in cases.   “People affected by TB, HIV and other infectious diseases as well as prisoners, migrants and people living in poverty will be at greater risk of reduced access to healthcare,” The Union said in a statement.  Of the 4,400 people who die every day from TB, at least 200 of those are children.   While COVID-19 does not  appear to cause serious symptoms in children, they are thought to be significant spreaders of the disease to older people.   Brigden said that while TB in children was largely ignored by health responders, they went on to learn several lessons on disease control from them.   “We understand that focusing on children is a key area,” she said.   “I hope that what comes out of this is the understanding that global health is important and that we need to protect vulnerable and at-risk people outside our own bubbles.”     

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