| 13 Octobre 2016
 Geneva/Washington¦13 October 2016 - New  data published by the World Health Organization (WHO) in its 2016  Global Tuberculosis (TB) Report show that countries need to move much  faster to prevent, detect and treat the disease if they are to meet  global targets.
Geneva/Washington¦13 October 2016 - New  data published by the World Health Organization (WHO) in its 2016  Global Tuberculosis (TB) Report show that countries need to move much  faster to prevent, detect and treat the disease if they are to meet  global targets. In addition, the rate of reduction in TB cases remained static at 1.5%  from 2014 to 2015. This needs to accelerate to 4-5% by 2020 to reach the  first milestones of the World Health Assembly-approved End TB Strategy.
 
 Tackling drug resistance and other challenges
 
 Multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) remains a public health crisis. WHO estimates that 480 000 people fell ill with MDR-TB in 2015[1].  Three countries carry the major burden of MDR-TB – India, China, and  the Russian Federation – which together account for nearly half of all  cases globally.
 
 Detection and treatment gaps continue to plague the MDR-TB response. In  2015, only one in five of the people newly eligible for second-line  treatment were able to access it. Cure rates continue to remain low  globally at 52%.
 
 “The dismal progress in the TB response is a tragedy for the millions of  people suffering from this disease. To save more lives now, we must get  newly recommended rapid tests, drugs and regimens to those who need  them.  Current actions and investments fall far short of what is  needed,” said Dr Mario Raviglione, Director of the WHO Global TB  Programme. “The world is finally waking up to the threat of  antimicrobial resistance -- now is the time to accelerate the MDR-TB  response.”
 
 In 2015, 22% of HIV-positive TB patients were not enrolled on  antiretroviral therapy (ART). According to WHO recommendations, ART  needs to be made available for all HIV-positive TB patients. Nearly a  million children under five, and people living with HIV, who are  especially vulnerable to TB and who were eligible for preventive  treatment, were able to access it in 2015. This needs to be rapidly  expanded.
 
 Closing critical gaps in TB financing 
 For TB care and prevention, investments in low and middle-income  countries fall almost US$ 2 billion short of the US$ 8.3 billion needed  in 2016. This gap will widen to US$ 6 billion by 2020 if current levels  of funding are not increased.
 
 Overall, around 84% of the financing available in low and middle-income  countries in 2016 was from domestic sources, but this was mostly  accounted for by the BRICS (Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, China  and South Africa) group of countries. Other low- and middle- income  countries continue to rely heavily on international donor financing,  with more than 75% coming from The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and  Malaria.
 
 In addition, WHO estimates that at least an extra US$ 1 billion per year  is needed to accelerate the development of new vaccines, diagnostics,  and medicines.
 
 “The resources deployed against TB, the leading infectious  killer in the world, are falling short,” said Dr Ariel Pablos-Méndez,  Assistant Administrator for Global Health, of the US Agency for  International Development (USAID) - the leading bilateral funder of the  TB response. “Everyone has a part to play in closing the gap. As the  report shows, we need universal health coverage, social protection  mechanisms, and public health financing in high burden countries. The  development aid community needs to step up more investments now, or we  will simply not end one of the world’s oldest and deadliest diseases.”
 
 Link to Report
 http://www.who.int/tb/publications/global_report/en/