Latest News

Tuberculosis Prevention Brings Economic Gains, Says WHO


 

Emerging Concerns

Although the WHO highlighted the global increase in access to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in 2022, which coincided with the recovery of healthcare systems in several countries after the beginning of the pandemic, it emphasized that the implementation of preventive treatment for exposed individuals and high-vulnerability populations remains slow.

Another concern is the increase in drug resistance. Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is considered a public health crisis. It is estimated that about 410,000 people had multidrug-resistant tuberculosis or rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis in 2022, but only two of every five patients had access to treatment.This story was translated from the Medscape Portuguese edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com .

Pages

Recommended Reading

WHO issues new TB guidelines for children and adolescents
MDedge Infectious Disease
Ukraine war likely to cause infection outbreaks that will spread beyond borders
MDedge Infectious Disease
Worst TB outbreak in 20 years reported in Washington state
MDedge Infectious Disease
Study affirms shorter regimens for drug-resistant tuberculosis
MDedge Infectious Disease
The surprising failure of vitamin D in deficient kids
MDedge Infectious Disease
Infant BCG vaccine protects only those under age 5 years
MDedge Infectious Disease
Proteomics reveals potential targets for drug-resistant TB
MDedge Infectious Disease
Severity score predicts mortality in pulmonary tuberculosis
MDedge Infectious Disease
All-oral regimen succeeds for rifampin-resistant tuberculosis
MDedge Infectious Disease
Isoniazid Resistance Linked With Tuberculosis Deaths
MDedge Infectious Disease