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World TB Day 2007

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Regional advocacy brochure (download brochure, pdf 1 MB)

   
 

In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful 

Message from Dr Hussein A. Gezairy
Regional Director,
WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region
on the occasion of
World Tuberculosis Day 24 March 2007

Among all communicable diseases, tuberculosis is still the number one killer of adults in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region. A disease that is totally preventable and curable is responsible for not less than 111 000 deaths in the Region and 2 million in the world every year. This is in addition to the absolutely avoidable suffering of tuberculosis patient’s families, relatives and communities who are directly and indirectly affected by this disease. This tragic situation cannot be allowed to go on any longer.

Today, the regional situation with regard to the 2005 global targets––70% case detection rate and 85% treatment success rate––is clear. Five countries in the Region, namely Lebanon, Morocco, Oman, Somalia and Tunisia, have met the targets. Bahrain and the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya have met the 70% case detection target. This is good news, and indicates that the current tuberculosis control strategy is effective. However, the fact still remains that at the regional level, we have unfortunately failed to achieve the global targets, particularly for case detection. Our case detection rate is only 44%. In other words, an estimated 284 000 tuberculosis patients in this region were missed in 2005. Those people therefore cannot access good quality tuberculosis care and their families, relatives and communities will continue to suffer unnecessarily unless immediate and ground-breaking measures are taken to save them.
 

The global theme of World Tuberculosis Day this year is: “TB anywhere is TB everywhere”. This is a very pro-active theme and is actually a reflection of the situation in the Region. It is a theme aiming at correcting the common misconception about tuberculosis. Tuberculosis is not a disease of the past. Tuberculosis is not only the “poor people’s problem”. Finding and treating tuberculosis patients is not solely the responsibility of Ministries of Health. If tuberculosis is anywhere, then tuberculosis can be found everywhere. The national tuberculosis programmes alone cannot possibly detect and provided care for all tuberculosis cases, even if they double or triple their efforts. 

The only plausible solution for the stagnant situation we have reached in the Region is partnership. This partnership will actively engage all stakeholders including governments, National Tuberculosis Programmes, independent experts, nongovernmental organizations and faith groups, donors, academia, celebrities, media, communities and patients, social workers, and financial institutions in the regional fight against tuberculosis. Only through a joint, effective and strong collaborative partnership will we have the power to reach a wider audience, to overcome the challenges facing us and eventually put an end to the suffering from tuberculosis in the Region.
 

 

 


 

 

 

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