Tuberculosis

Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the world’s biggest global health crises. Killing 1.5 million people in 2020, TB is the world’s second deadliest infectious disease after COVID-19 (WHO).

Obsolete treatments, the lack of an effective vaccine, and the lack of suitable diagnostic tools make it difficult to control the global TB epidemic.

Some gains have been made in recent years; the first new TB drugs in half a century and the trial of a shorter course of treatment for drug-resistant TB (DR-TB). But the harsh reality remains - 10 million people fell sick with TB in 2020 and nearly half a million developed DR-TB, which is much harder to treat. Only about one-third of people with DR-TB accessed treatment in 2020. The majority go undiagnosed and therefore untreated.

IN 2021

Quick facts about Tuberculosis

 
Phenduka Mtshali, an DR-TB patient in Eshowe, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa
Multi-drug Resistant Tuberculosis

MSF calls for scale up of shorter and safer DR-TB treatments to help save more lives

Press Release 27 Oct 2022
 
Phenduka Mtshali, an DR-TB patient in Eshowe, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa
Multi-drug Resistant Tuberculosis

MSF responds to WHO Global TB Report 2022

Press Release 27 Oct 2022
 
MSF, Doctors without borders, Eshowe Rural COVID-19 Response
Global health

How the upcoming Global Fund replenishment decides who will be saved in the face of the HIV, TB and malaria pandemics, and why the pledges on September 21 matter.

Op-Ed 16 Sep 2022
 
MSF Hospital in Bangassou, CAR
Tuberculosis

MSF warns that supply delays of critical TB test will cost lives

Press Release 15 Sep 2022
 
MSF treating patient with Malaria
HIV/AIDS

Global fight against HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria ground to a halt

Press Release 7 Sep 2022
 
TB diagnosis in Tajikstan
Tuberculosis

MSF responds to updated WHO guidelines for tuberculosis in children

Press Release 25 Mar 2022