Tuberculosis TB

UNAIDS reports mixed progress towards reaching the 2020 target of reducing TB deaths among people living with HIV by 75%

22 March 2019

Five countries met the target three years ahead of the 2020 deadline and 18 more are on track; however, most countries are lagging behind and risk missing the target completely. UNAIDS urges countries to step up action.   

GENEVA, 22 March 2019—Ahead of World Tuberculosis Day, on 24 March 2019, UNAIDS is urging countries to step up action to meet the 2020 target of reducing tuberculosis (TB) deaths among people living with HIV by 75%, as outlined in the 2016 United Nations Political Declaration on Ending AIDS. World Health Organization estimates show that, globally, TB deaths among people living with HIV have fallen by 42% since 2010, from 520 000 down to 300 000 in 2017.

The estimates show that, by 2017, five low- or middle-income countries achieved or exceeded the target of a 75% reduction in TB deaths among people living with HIV, three years ahead of schedule—India (84%), Eritrea (83%), Djibouti (78%), Malawi (78%) and Togo (75%). A further 18 countries reduced TB deaths among people living with HIV by more than 50% and are on track to achieve the target by the end of 2020, provided that scale-up of services is maintained. However, the estimates also show that most countries are not on track and that deaths are rising in some regions and countries.

“TB should be a disease of the past. It has been treatable and preventable for decades. Years of neglecting the rights of the world’s poor to basic health care, food and shelter have let TB take hold and allowed resistance to build,” said Michel Sidibé, Executive Director of UNAIDS. “People living with HIV are especially at risk. There is still a chance for many countries to meet the target, but we have to act now―it’s time to end TB and AIDS.”

Around 40 countries showed a rise in the number of TB deaths among people living with HIV between 2010 and 2017. In eastern Europe and central Asia, the number of TB deaths among people living with HIV increased by 22% between 2010 and 2017, with increases being seen in all but three countries in the region. In Latin America, deaths rose by 7%. The lack of progress in some countries is a clear indication that further efforts are needed to address the main challenges, including the need for equity and ensuring that vulnerable groups have access to integrated HIV and TB services.

To accelerate progress in reducing TB deaths among people living with HIV and reach the 2020 target, UNAIDS is urging countries to fully integrate TB and HIV services and to use community-based approaches to find, diagnose and treat the missing cases. Countries need to screen all people living with HIV for TB and all people with TB need to be tested for HIV. The quality of TB and HIV diagnosis also needs to be improved. HIV and TB prevention efforts need scaling up, particularly for people at higher risk of infection. In addition, all people diagnosed with TB and HIV need immediate access to treatment and support to adhere to their treatment regimens.

“Although progress is mixed, we can see that the target can be met, and a large number of countries can get there if they act with urgency and use focused community-based approaches,” said Mr Sidibé. “I cannot stress enough how critical it is to integrate TB and HIV services so that people can be screened, tested, treated and offered prevention for both diseases, ideally under the same roof, by the same health worker and on the same day. This is an approach that we know saves lives.”

With less than two years to achieve the target, UNAIDS is urging all countries to step up action and partners to work together to ensure that all people affected by HIV and TB have access to effective prevention and treatment services.

TB is the top infectious killer worldwide, claiming around 4400 lives a day. TB also remains the leading cause of death among people living with HIV, causing one in three AIDS-related deaths. In 2017, 1.6 million people died from TB, including around 300 000 people living with HIV.

UNAIDS

The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) leads and inspires the world to achieve its shared vision of zero new HIV infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. UNAIDS unites the efforts of 11 UN organizations—UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP, UNDP, UNFPA, UNODC, UN Women, ILO, UNESCO, WHO and the World Bank—and works closely with global and national partners towards ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals. Learn more at unaids.org and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

Contact

UNAIDS
Sophie Barton-Knott
tel. +41 22 791 1697 / +41 79 514 6896
bartonknotts@unaids.org

Contact

UNAIDS
Media
tel. +41 22 791 42 37
communications@unaids.org

Tuberculosis and HIV — Progress towards the 2020 target

tb-and-hiv-progress-towards-2020.PNG

Tuberculosis and HIV

20180924_tuberculosis-and-hiv_en.png

Timeline of HIV and TB

20180924_Timeline-of-HIV-TB.png

More on this topic

Tuberculosis

Building faith-based partnerships to end AIDS and TB among children and adolescents

28 September 2018

Faith-based organizations have long played a critical role in the response to tuberculosis (TB). Many faith-based health service providers have implemented effective TB/HIV responses modelled on decades of work on TB. Today, faith-based organizations are delivering effective, high-quality TB/HIV services that complement national public health programmes in the countries most affected by TB and HIV.

Successful TB/HIV responses address both the biomedical and the social determinants that underpin these illnesses, such as poverty, inequality, situations of conflict and crisis, compromised human rights and criminalization. Children and adolescents are particularly vulnerable to infection and the impact of TB/HIV on their families. Because they have positions of trust at the heart of communities, faith-based organizations can provide services and support that extend beyond the reach of many public sector health systems.

To provide an opportunity to strengthen relationships and forge new partnerships, on 27 September the World Council of Churches–Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance, in collaboration with UNAIDS, the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the United Nations Interagency Task Force on Religion and Development, hosted an interfaith prayer breakfast on the sidelines of the 73rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, United States of America. Keynote speakers and table discussions focused on the outcomes of the United Nations High-Level Meeting on Tuberculosis, which took place on 26 September, and examined how the longstanding experience of faith-based organizations in responding to TB/HIV can support the new declarations agreed by Member States during the historic high-level meeting.

The participants included faith leaders and health service providers from different religious traditions. Survivors of multidrug-resistant TB brought a powerful sense of urgency and reality to the discussion. The participants renewed their call to national governments to not only maintain, but increase, support in order to end AIDS and TB as public health threats by 2030.

Quotes

“We are grateful for the advocates who call us out when things don’t go well and hold us to account. I leave here this week grateful that when the community of faith come together with governments and funders we can achieve our goals. You make us proud.”

Deborah Birx United States Global AIDS Coordinator and Special Representative for Global Health Diplomacy

“We need each other. Faith leaders, please help us to end stigma and discrimination. It is unacceptable that 660 children die of tuberculosis each day; 90% of children who die from tuberculosis worldwide are untreated. And just 50% of children living with HIV are on treatment. What is most important is working together with compassion, love, generosity, empathy and kindness—with these, we will change the face of the HIV and tuberculosis epidemics together.”

Michel Sidibé Executive Director, UNAIDS

“For many of us, this is both personal and real. My husband’s grandfather died of tuberculosis when his father was young. Our hope is that this breakfast will strengthen old relationships and build new partnerships to address tuberculosis and HIV with concrete actions that will bring abundant life to all.”

Mary Ann Swenson World Council of Churches

“I saw on the X-ray the big hole in my lung and thought, why did I get multidrug-resistant TB? I had dedicated my life to caring for people. Later, I was fortunate to get on a trial of the first new tuberculosis drug in 40 years. It saved my life and I can now continue to speak and advocate so that many more can live.”

Dalene von Delft multidrug-resistant tuberculosis survivor

“Our response to tuberculosis and AIDS would not have been and will not be the same as it is today without the faith community and now there are five critical actions we need to take together. Educate, advocate and fight stigma. Continue to fight for patient-centred care. Give voice to the voiceless, especially the children. Advocate for resources to end tuberculosis and HIV. Continue to push to make yourselves a part of the discussion.”

Eric Goosby United Nations Secretary-General’s Special Envoy on Tuberculosis

The need to scale up integrated TB/HIV care

26 September 2018

Global leaders met for the first United Nations High-Level Meeting on Tuberculosis on 26 September. The meeting was a critical moment to drive the delivery of political commitments and ensure a people-centred and coordinated tuberculosis (TB)/HIV response.

In the morning before the opening of the high-level meeting, affected communities, ministers of health, representatives of the United Nations, TB/HIV programme implementers and technical experts came together at a side event entitled No One Left Behind: Scaling Up Integrated People-Centred TB/HIV Care Towards Universal Health Coverage. The event provided a space to discuss the current challenges, gaps and opportunities in serving people and communities affected by TB/HIV and how each stakeholder has a unique opportunity to commit to increase the effort, overcome the barriers and scale up programmes and policies that work.

Approximately 10 million people fell ill with TB in 2017. The World Health Organization estimates that nearly a quarter of the world’s population has a latent TB infection. TB is the leading cause of death among people living with HIV, causing around a third of all AIDS-related deaths. While TB programmes generally have a very high HIV testing rate, HIV programmes are not testing, preventing and treating TB nearly enough.

The panel of practitioners and people affected by TB/HIV discussed what it takes to build an effective and sustained TB/HIV approach that delivers quality integrated care built on a strong community response. Speakers called for the response to be adequately funded and rights-based and firmly anchored in the universal health coverage agenda and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

The speakers reiterated the critical importance of involving the users of health services in planning and implementing those services and staying accountable to the communities that are at the heart of the service delivery. They called for a break in the one client–two clinics model that has been the history of TB/HIV care in the past and agreed on the importance of people-centred care and both a funding environment and a government position that encourages local access and joint programming.

Quotes

“Tuberculosis has no boundaries. Tuberculosis and HIV have affected and killed millions in the world. We cannot continue to do business as usual. We call on our governments to take a leading role in funding the response. Donors and national governments need to step up.”

Carol Nawina Nyirenda Executive Director, Community Initiative for Tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS and Malaria Plus Related Diseases

“Tuberculosis is not just a technical problem, it is a truly political issue. It is an issue of poverty, of people who have not been exposed to information and who have been left behind. We need to learn from what we did in the AIDS response and apply it to the response to tuberculosis. We cannot talk about achieving the Sustainable Development Goals if we continue to work in silos.”

Michel Sidibé Executive Director, UNAIDS

“One client–two clinics: this mould has to be broken. We need to change the clinics to be youth-friendly, men-friendly and friendly for women who are not pregnant—to get people into the clinics. We can’t have just words, the client has to be at the centre. Every minister of health needs to go back from this meeting and make their tuberculosis and HIV people work together.”

Deborah Birx United States Global AIDS Coordinator and Special Representative for Global Health Diplomacy

“Why are so many people living with HIV dying from tuberculosis? The people most in need are the ones who are the ones who are left behind. We need new and improved medicines and diagnostics, new service delivery models based around what people and communities need, and integrated services for tuberculosis/HIV and other health issues.”

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus Director-General, World Health Organization

“The people who have the most at stake are the ones who use the services. For governments not to understand that is a tragic mistake. We need to change the systems to the changing needs of people and create a more comprehensive and sustainable package of medical care for people. There is light at the end of the tunnel, but it’s a long tunnel.”

Eric Goosby United Nations Secretary-General’s Special Envoy on Tuberculosis

An opportunity to end two of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases: TB and HIV

26 September 2018

The World Health Organization recently released its Global tuberculosis report 2018. Although it shows encouraging pockets of progress in responding to tuberculosis (TB) and HIV in some areas, it paints a rather bleak picture on ending the dual epidemics by 2030.

HIV is a relatively recent epidemic, having first been identified in the early 1980s; however, TB has been around for thousands of years. Archaeologists believe that TB affected the ancient Egyptians, with King Tutankhamun himself having possibly been affected.

Many famous people have fallen ill or died of TB over the years, including John Keats, Frédéric Chopin, Charlotte and Emily Brontë, Nelson Mandela and Franz Kafka, to name but a few. In the early twentieth century, supposed cures for TB included day-long bracing outdoor siestas in Swiss mountain sanitoriums, freezing cold showers and diets of up to 12 meals a day washed down with litres of milk and wine, and even staying in cowsheds, where the warmth and ammonia gases given off by the animals’ urine was supposedly a balm for infected lungs.

Effective medicinal treatment for TB became available in the mid-1940s and has changed little since. Today’s medicine, although toxic and antiquated, is incredibly effective and relatively cheap. However, finding people with TB to treat and ensuring that they stay on treatment poses problems and is particularly urgent for people living with HIV.

The World Health Organization estimates that in 2017 there were around 10 million people with active TB disease, 9% of whom were people living with HIV. Of the 10 million, approximately 3.6 million, or 36%, are “missing”, meaning that they may not have been diagnosed or properly treated. Among people living with HIV, the gap is wider, at 49%.

 

People living with HIV with latent TB are around 20 times more likely to develop active TB. Untreated TB is rapidly fatal among people living with HIV.

Fewer than 60% of TB patients are screened for TB, precluding treatment and resulting in preventable deaths. TB is the leading infectious killer globally and the leading killer of people living with HIV, accounting for one in every three AIDS-related deaths. In 2017, around 1.6 million people died of TB, including 300 000 people living with HIV.

Many breakthroughs can be achieved by improving collaboration between HIV and TB programmes to find and treat TB and HIV, including investing in diagnostics, vaccines and medicines, including preventive medicine and medicine to treat TB, including multidrug-resistant TB.

However, more commitment, investment and action are needed.

It is estimated that US$ 10.4 billion is required in 2018 for an effective response to TB in the 118 low- and middle-income countries that account for 97% of reported cases globally. The actual amount available in 2018 was US$ 6.9 billion—a shortfall of US$ 3.5 billion.

To respond effectively to HIV, UNAIDS estimates that US$ 26.2 billion will be required for the AIDS response in 2020. In 2017, US$ 21.3 billion was available in low- and middle-income countries—a shortfall of around US$ 5 billion. Only by filling the funding gaps will ending the epidemics start to become a reality.

With around 1.7 billion people, or 23% of the world’s population, infected with latent TB, of whom 5–10% have a chance of developing active TB disease, the world needs to take urgent action.

On 26 September, world leaders will come together at the United Nations in New York, United States of America, for the very first United Nations High-Level Meeting on Tuberculosis. As TB takes centre stage for one important day, the world has the opportunity to set some bold actionable targets to end two of the world’s leading infectious killers: TB and HIV.

To seize this opportunity would not only stop more than 6000 people dying every day from TB and HIV, but it would prevent new infections and bring the world a giant leap closer to improving global health, reducing poverty and achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.

 

UNAIDS calls for bold action to end TB and AIDS

23 March 2018

GENEVA, 23 March 2018—Ahead of World TB Day 2018, UNAIDS is calling on all partners to take unprecedented and bold action to advance efforts to end tuberculosis (TB) and AIDS by 2030.

TB continues to be the top infectious killer worldwide, claiming more than 4500 lives a day. TB is also the leading cause of death among people living with HIV, causing one in three AIDS-related deaths. In 2016, 1.7 million people died from TB, including around 374 000 people living with HIV.

“The world has the resources to end the interlinked epidemics of tuberculosis and HIV, but political commitment and country action are lacking,” said Michel Sidibé, UNAIDS Executive Director. “Political, religious and civil society leaders need to step up to guarantee everyone the right to breathe, to live free from tuberculosis and AIDS.”

TB is preventable and curable; however, persistent challenges remain. Many of these challenges are also faced by the HIV response and can be effectively addressed if programmes are integrated. They include unequal access to services, with the most marginalized people still out of reach, the need to access education, housing and basic services to prevent, diagnose and treat TB and HIV through local health-care services and community health-care workers, the need to strengthen health systems and the urgent need to mobilize resources in programming, research and development.

To address the challenges and push forward the response to TB and HIV, UNAIDS has outlined five important actions for partners:

  • Give a new impetus to the response to TB and HIV by impelling political, religious and civil society leaders to champion the universal right to live free from TB and HIV, building on existing rights and health and social movements.
  • Empower communities to demand their right to health. Affected communities must call on governments to improve living standards, including by accessing nutritious food, breathing clean air, completing their education and fostering an enabling economic environment, all of which will help to reduce the burden of TB and HIV.
  • Ensure rights-promoting and non-discriminatory service delivery for all, especially for people at higher risk of TB and HIV, such as children and marginalized populations, to protect them against catastrophic health expenditures in the context of universal health coverage. Thus, duty of care extends beyond health to include safe workplaces and places of detention.
  • Engage ministers of finance to approach health as an investment, not an expenditure. While the above actions carry some financial outlays, assessments of returns on investment in health have demonstrated their long-term value to societies and economies. An efficient and effective response to HIV and TB will require working across all ministries and sectors to mobilize sufficient domestic financing to strengthen health systems.
  • Innovate for new medicines and vaccines. Greater partnerships between the public and private sectors are urgently needed to accelerate innovation that leads to the discovery, development and rapid uptake of new tools to prevent and treat TB and HIV, as are strategies for shorter and less-toxic TB regimens.

Ending the global TB and HIV epidemics is possible. HIV is preventable and effective and affordable treatment is available. TB is preventable, treatable and in most cases curable.

Progress has been made—deaths from TB among people living with HIV declined by 37% between 2005 and 2016 as prevention, testing and treatment have improved and increased. However, there is still much more work to be done.

In September 2018, world leaders will come together at the United Nations in New York, United States of America, for the first-ever United Nations General Assembly High-Level Meeting on Tuberculosis. This meeting will be an important opportunity for countries to adopt a progressive, visionary and actionable political declaration on TB.

“The United Nations High-Level Meeting on Tuberculosis could provide the political, social and financial momentum needed to end TB,” said Mr Sidibé. “This year could be the most important since Robert Koch discovered the cause of TB136 years ago, but only if we all show leadership.” 

UNAIDS urges all partners to ensure that TB is elevated on global, regional, national and subnational political and social agendas, that TB and HIV are addressed in unison and that partners combine robust efforts to end TB and HIV by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals.

TB is the leading cause of death among people living with HIV

 

timeline-hiv-tb_600.jpg

 

UNAIDS

The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) leads and inspires the world to achieve its shared vision of zero new HIV infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. UNAIDS unites the efforts of 11 UN organizations—UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP, UNDP, UNFPA, UNODC, UN Women, ILO, UNESCO, WHO and the World Bank—and works closely with global and national partners towards ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals. Learn more at unaids.org and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

Contact

UNAIDS
Sophie Barton-Knott
tel. +41 22 791 1697
bartonknotts@unaids.org

What UNAIDS does on...

Tuberculosis and HIV

Multimedia

Watch video

Our work

TB and HIV

Tuberculosis and HIV

TB is the leading cause of death among people living with HIV

Close

Timeline of HIV and TB

Tuberculosis is the leading cause of illness and death among people living with HIV. TB can be cured.

Close

Pages