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WHO TB REPORT 2008

WORLDWIDE EFFORTS TO CONFRONT TUBERCULOSIS ARE MAKING PROGRESS, BUT TOO SLOW. This report is WHO's twelfth annual report on global tuberculosis control in a series that started in 1997.

17 March 2008 -- Geneva -- The World Health Organization (WHO) report, Global Tuberculosis Control 2008, released today, finds that the pace of the progress to control the tuberculosis (TB) epidemic slowed slightly in 2006, the most recent year for which data were available. The new information documents a slowdown in progress on diagnosing people with TB. Between 2001 to 2005, the average rate at which new TB cases were detected was increasing by 6% per year; but between 2005 and 2006 that rate of increase was cut in half, to 3%. The reason for this slowing of progress is that some national programmes that were making rapid strides during the last five years have been unable to continue at the same pace in 2006. Moreover, in most African countries there has been no increase in the detection of TB cases through national programmes. Other studies have also shown that many patients are treated by private care providers, and by non-governmental, faith-based and community organizations, thus escaping detection by the public programmes.

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