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The End TB Strategy

Global strategy and targets for tuberculosis


prevention, care and control after 2015a
[A67/11
(The official text approved by the Sixty seventh World 14 March
Health Assembly, May 2014]
2014)
The End TB Strategy
Global strategy and targets for tuberculosis
prevention, care and control after 2015a
[A67/11 14 March 2014]

WHOs declaration of tuberculosis as a global In May 2012, Member States at the Sixty-
public health emergency in 1993 ended a fifth World Health Assembly requested the
period of prolonged global neglect. Together, DirectorGeneral to submit a comprehensive
the subsequent launch of the directly observed review of the global tuberculosis situation
treatment, short course (DOTS) strategy; to date, and to present new multisectoral
inclusion of tuberculosis-related indicators strategic approaches and new international
in the Millennium Development Goals; targets for the post-2015 period to the Sixty-
development and implementation of the seventh World Health Assembly in May 2014,
Stop TB Strategy that underpins the Global through the Executive Board.b The work to
Plan to Stop TB 20062015; and adoption of prepare this has involved a wide range of
resolution WHA62.15 on the prevention and partners providing substantive input into the
control of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis and development of the new strategy, including
extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis by the high-level representatives of Member States,
Sixty-second World Health Assembly have all national tuberculosis programmes, technical
helped to accelerate the global expansion of and scientific institutions, financial partners
tuberculosis care and control. and development agencies, civil society,
nongovernmental organizations, and the
private sector.

b See document WHA65/2012/REC/3, summary record of the


a See resolution WHA67.1. sixth meeting of Committee B, section 3.

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The process. WHOs Strategic and Technical the opening day of the Conference at the
Advisory Group for Tuberculosis approved global tuberculosis symposium, which was
the broad, inclusive scope of the consultative attended by over 700 stakeholders. In 2013,
process for the development of the draft strategy. three special consultations including senior
It began with a web-based consultation to seek officials of Member States, technical experts
ways in which to strengthen the current strategy and civil society were organized in order
and introduce any new components. During to discuss (i) formulation of the post-2015
2012, as part of the annual meetings of national tuberculosis targets; (ii)approaches to building
tuberculosis programmes, each regional office on the opportunities presented by expansion of
organized consultations on the proposed universal health coverage and social protection
new strategic framework and targets with to strengthen tuberculosis care and prevention;
health ministry officials, national tuberculosis and (iii) research and innovation for improved
programme managers and partners. Officials of tuberculosis care, control and elimination. In
countries with a high tuberculosis burden then June 2013, the Strategic and Technical Advisory
deliberated on the draft strategic framework at Group for Tuberculosis endorsed the draft,
a special consultation organized just before the including the global targets and their rationale.c
43rd Union World Conference (Kuala Lumpur,
1317 November 2013). Following this, the The framework of the post-2015 global
framework was presented and discussed on tuberculosis strategy is presented in Figure 1.

Figure 1. POST-2015 GLOBAL TUBERCULOSIS STRATEGY FRAMEWORK

VISION A world free of tuberculosis


zero deaths, disease and suffering due to tuberculosis
GOAL End the global tuberculosis epidemic
MILESTONES FOR 2025 75% reduction in tuberculosis deaths (compared with 2015)
50% reduction in tuberculosis incidence rate
(less than 55 tuberculosis cases per 100 000 population)
No affected families facing catastrophic costs due to tuberculosis
TARGETS FOR 2035 95% reduction in tuberculosis deaths (compared with 2015)
90% reduction in tuberculosis incidence rate
(less than 10 tuberculosis cases per 100 000 population)
No affected families facing catastrophic costs due to tuberculosis
PRINCIPLES
1. Government stewardship and accountability, with monitoring and evaluation
2. Strong coalition with civil society organizations and communities
3. Protection and promotion of human rights, ethics and equity
4. Adaptation of the strategy and targets at country level, with global collaboration

PILLARS AND COMPONENTS


1. INTEGRATED, PATIENT-CENTRED CARE AND PREVENTION
A. Early diagnosis of tuberculosis including universal drug-susceptibility testing, and systematic screening of contacts
and high-risk groups
B. Treatment of all people with tuberculosis including drug-resistant tuberculosis, and patient support
C. Collaborative tuberculosis/HIV activities, and management of comorbidities
D. Preventive treatment of persons at high risk, and vaccination against tuberculosis
2. BOLD POLICIES AND SUPPORTIVE SYSTEMS
A. Political commitment with adequate resources for tuberculosis care and prevention
B. Engagement of communities, civil society organizations, and public and private care providers
C. Universal health coverage policy, and regulatory frameworks for case notification, vital registration, quality and
rational use of medicines, and infection control
D. Social protection, poverty alleviation and actions on other determinants of tuberculosis
3. INTENSIFIED RESEARCH AND INNOVATION
A. Discovery, development and rapid uptake of new tools, interventions and strategies
B. Research to optimize implementation and impact, and promote innovations

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APPROACHES
Expandingccare, strengthening prevention, delivery of tuberculosis care and prevention.
and intensifying research. Addressing the Above them are the national health ministries
above challenges will require innovative, that provide critical systemic support, enforce
multisectoral, and integrated approaches. The regulatory mechanisms, and coordinate
DOTS strategy strengthened public sector integrated approaches through interministerial
tuberculosis programmes to help to tackle a and intersectoral collaboration. Above all,
large burden of drugsusceptible disease. The the national governments have to provide
Stop TB Strategy,d built on DOTS, helped to the overall stewardship to keep tuberculosis
begin addressing drugresistant tuberculosis elimination high on the development agenda
and HIV-associated tuberculosis while through political commitment, investments and
promoting research to develop new tools. It oversight, while making rapid progress towards
also helped to expand partnerships with all universal health coverage and social protection.
care providers, civil society organizations and
communities, in the context of strengthening Elevating leadership and widening ownership.
health systems. Ending the tuberculosis Tuberculosis care and control need to be
epidemic will require further expansion of strengthened further and expanded to include
the scope and reach of interventions for prevention of tuberculosis. For this purpose,
tuberculosis care and prevention; institution in-country leadership for tuberculosis control
of systems and policies to create an enabling ought to be elevated to higher levels within
environment and share responsibilities; and health ministries. This is essential in order to
aggressive pursuit of research and innovation effect coordinated action on multiple fronts
to promote development and use of new tools and to accomplish three clear objectives:
for tuberculosis care and prevention. It will also (1)achieving universal access to early detection
require a provision for revisiting and adjusting and proper treatment of all patients with
the new strategy based on progress and the tuberculosis; (2)putting supportive health and
extent to which agreed milestones and targets social sector policies and systems in place to
are being met. enable effective delivery of tuberculosis care
and prevention; and (3)intensifying research to
Eliciting systemic support and engaging develop and apply new technologies, tools and
stakeholders. In practical terms, continuing approaches to enable eventual tuberculosis
progress beyond 2015 will require intensified elimination. The three pillars of the global
actions by and beyond tuberculosis tuberculosis strategy are designed to address
programmes within and outside the health these objectives.
sector. The new strategy envisages concrete
actions from three levels of governance in
close collaboration with all stakeholders and
with the engagement of communities. At the
core are national tuberculosis programmes or
the equivalent structures that are responsible
for coordination of all activities related to
c Strategic and Technical Advisory Group for Tuberculosis:
report of 13th meeting, 1112 June 2013 (document WHO/
HTM/TB/2013.9).
d The six components of the Stop TB Strategy are: (i)pursue
high-quality DOTS expansion and enhancement;
(ii)address TB/HIV, MDR-TB and other special challenges;
(iii)contribute to health system strengthening; (iv)engage
all care providers; (v)empower people with tuberculosis,
and communities; and (vi)enable and promote research.

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VISION, GOAL, MILESTONES AND TARGETS
The vision for the post-2015 global tuberculosis 2030. Table 1 presents key global indicators,
strategy is a world free of tuberculosis, milestones and targets for the post-2015
also expressed as zero deaths, disease and strategy.
suffering due to tuberculosis. The goal is to
end the global tuberculosis epidemic. A key milestone is a 75% reduction in tuberculosis
deaths by 2025, compared with 2015. This will
The Millennium Development Goal target require two achievements. First, the annual
to halt and begin to reverse the incidence decline in global tuberculosis incidence rates
of tuberculosis by 2015 has already been must accelerate from an average of 2% per year
achieved. The related Stop TB Partnership in 2015 to 10% per year by 2025. A 10% per year
targets of reducing tuberculosis prevalence and decline in tuberculosis incidence is ambitious
death rates by 50% relative to 1990 are on track yet feasible; it has been projected on the basis
to be achieved by 2015. Under this strategy, of the fastest rate documented at national
new, ambitious yet feasible global targets are level, which occurred in the context of universal
proposed for 2035. These include achieving access to health care and rapid socioeconomic
a 95% decline in deaths due to tuberculosis development in Western Europe and North
compared with 2015, and reaching an equivalent America during the second half of the past
90% reduction in tuberculosis incidence rate century. Secondly, the proportion of incident
from a projected 110 cases/100000 in 2015 to cases dying from tuberculosis (the case-fatality
10cases/100000 or less by 2035. These targets ratio) needs to decline from a projected 15%
are equivalent to the current levels in some low- in 2015 to 6.5% by 2025. It has been modelled
incidence countries of North America, western that rapid progress towards universal access to
Europe and the Western Pacific. An additional existing tools combined with socioeconomic
target proposed to ascertain progress of development can lead to a 75% reduction in
universal health coverage and social protection tuberculosis deaths. Furthermore, improved
is that by 2020, no tuberculosis-affected person tools, such as a rapid point-of-care test and
or family should face catastrophic costs due to improved tuberculosis treatment regimens
tuberculosis care. are likely to emerge soon from the research
and development pipeline thus facilitating
Milestones that will need to be reached before achievement of the milestones.
2035 are also proposed for 2020, 2025, and

Table 1. Key global indicators, milestones and targets for the post-2015 tuberculosis strategy

Milestones Targets
Indicators with baseline values for 2015
2020 2025 2030 2035
Percentage reduction in deaths due to
tuberculosis 35% 75% 90% 95%
(projected 2015 baseline: 1.3 million deaths)
Percentage and absolute reduction in
20% 50% 80% 90%
tuberculosis incidence rate
(<85/100 000) (<55/100 000) (<20/100 000) (<10/100 000)
(projected 2015 baseline 110/100 000)
Percentage of affected families facing
catastrophic costs due to tuberculosis Zero Zero Zero Zero
(projected 2015 baseline: not yet available)

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In order to sustain progress beyond 2025 and be remarkable, but would not be sufficient to
achieve by 2035 a reduction in tuberculosis maintain the rate of progress required to achieve
deaths of 95% and a 90% reduction in the the 2035 targets. For new tools to be available
incidence rate from 110 cases/100 000 to for introduction by 2025, greatly enhanced
less than 10cases per 100000, there must be and immediate investments in research and
additional tools available by 2025. In particular, development will be required. Figure 2 shows
a new vaccine that is effective pre- and post- the projected acceleration of the decline
exposure, and better diagnostics, as well as in global tuberculosis incidence rates with
safer and easier treatment for latent tuberculosis optimization of current tools combined with
infection, will be needed. Achievements with progress towards universal health coverage and
existing tools complemented by universal social protection from 2015, and the additional
health coverage and social protection would impact of new tools by 2025.

Figure 2. Projected acceleration in the decline of global tuberculosis incidence rates to target
levels

100
Current global trend: -1.5%/year

75
Optimize use of
current & new tools -10%/year by 2025
Rate per 100,000/year

emerging from
pipeline, pursue
universal health
50 coverage and social
protection

Introduce new tools:


a vaccine, new drugs & -5%/year
treatment regimens, and
25 a point-of-care test for
treatment of active TB
disease and latent TB -17%/year
infection
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2015 2020 2025 2030 2035

The milestone that no families affected by have access to appropriate social protection
tuberculosis face catastrophic costs implies schemes that cover or compensate for direct
minimizing direct medical costs, such as fees non-medical costs and income losses. With
for consultations, hospitalization, tests and sufficient political commitment, tuberculosis-
medicines as well as direct non-medical costs related costs could be rapidly reduced in all
such as those for transport and any loss of income countries, and therefore many countries may be
while under care. It requires that tuberculosis able to reach the target by 2020.
patients and tuberculosis-affected households

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THE PRINCIPLES OF THE STRATEGY
countries include a treatment success rate of at
Government least 85%, and testing of 100% of tuberculosis
patients for drug susceptibility and HIV.
stewardship and
accountability with Strong coalition
monitoring and with civil society
evaluation organizations and
Activities under the tuberculosis strategy communities
span the health and social sectors and
beyond, including finance, labour, trade and The affected communities must also be
development. Stewardship responsibilities a prominent part of proposed solutions.
should be shared by all levels of the government Community representatives and civil society
local, provincial, and central. The central must be enabled to engage more actively
government should remain the steward of in programme planning and design, service
stewards for tuberculosis care and prevention, delivery, and monitoring, as well as in
working with all stakeholders. information, education, support to patients
and their families, research, and advocacy. To
The success of the post-2015 global tuberculosis this end, a strong coalition that includes all
strategy will depend on effective execution of stakeholders needs to be built. Such a coalition
key stewardship responsibilities by governments of partners can assist people in both accessing
in close collaboration with all stakeholders: high-quality care and in demanding high-
providing the vision and direction through quality services. A national coalition can also
the national tuberculosis programme and the help drive greater action on the determinants
health system; collecting and using data for of the tuberculosis epidemic.
progressive improvements in tuberculosis care
and prevention; and exerting influence through
regulation and other means to achieve the Protection and
stated goals and objectives of the strategy.

To ensure accountability, regular monitoring


promotion of human
and evaluation need to be built into strategy
implementation. Progress will need to be
rights, ethics and
measured against ambitious national targets
and indicators. Table 2e presents an illustrative
equity
list of key global indicators that should be Policies and strategies for the design of the
adopted and adapted for national use and for overall national tuberculosis response, and the
which country-specific targets should be set. delivery of tuberculosis care and prevention,
These indicators should be supplemented by have to explicitly address human rights,
others considered necessary to capture progress ethics and equity. Access to high-quality
in the implementation of all essential activities. tuberculosis care is an important element of
Examples of targets that could apply in all the right to health. This strategy is built on a
rights-based approach that ensures protection
e See page 87.

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of human rights and promotion of rights-
enhancing policies and interventions. These Adaptation of the
strategy and targets
include engagement of affected persons and
communities in facilitating implementation of
all pillars and components of the strategy with
special attention to key affected populations. at country level, with
Tuberculosis care and prevention pose ethical
dilemmas. National tuberculosis programmes
global collaboration
should acknowledge and address these with No global strategy can apply similarly to all settings
due respect to relevant ethical values. These across or within countries. The tuberculosis
may include, for example, the conflict between strategy will have to be adapted to diverse country
the public interest in preventing disease settings, based on a comprehensive national
transmission and patients rights to demand strategic plan. Prioritization of interventions
a supportive care environment or refuse should be undertaken based on local contexts,
treatment; the response to the stigmatization needs and capacities. A sound knowledge of
attached to the disease and the discrimination country-specific disease epidemiology will be
against those affected; the lengthy treatment essential, including mapping of people at a
and the challenges of adherence to treatment; greater risk, understanding of socioeconomic
ensuring patient-centred service provision and contexts of vulnerable populations, and a grasp
balancing the risk of infection to health care of health system context including underserved
workers; the care to be offered when there are areas. Adoption of the global strategy should be
not effective treatment options; and setting immediately followed by its national adaptation
of priorities for research and for delivery of and development of clear guidance on how the
interventions. Ways to address these dilemmas different components of the strategy could be
should be guided by globally recognized implemented, based on local evidence when
principles and values, should be sensitive to possible.
local values and traditions, and should be
informed by debates among all stakeholders. In a globalized world, diseases like tuberculosis
can spread far and wide via international travel
The strategy aims to promote equity through and trade. Tackling tuberculosis effectively
identification of the risks, needs and demands requires close collaboration among countries.
of those affected, to enable equal opportunities Effective intercountry collaboration also
to prevent disease transmission, equal access requires global coordination and support
to diagnosis and treatment services, and equal to enable adherence to the International
access to means to prevent associated social Health Regulations (2005) and ensure health
impacts and catastrophic economic costs. The security. Countries within a region can benefit
process through which to meet the targets, and from regional collaboration. Migration within
achieve the goals, of the strategy will be better and between countries poses challenges
served by applying a rights-based approach, and addressing them will require in-country
developing and maintaining the highest ethical coordination and cross-border collaboration.
standards in every action taken, and ensuring Global coordination is also essential for
that inequities are progressively reduced and mobilizing resources for tuberculosis care
eliminated. and prevention from diverse multilateral,
bilateral and domestic sources. WHOs global
tuberculosis report, which annually provides
an overview of the status of the tuberculosis
epidemic and implementation of global
strategies, demonstrates and symbolizes the
benefits of close collaboration and global
coordination.

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Strengthening and expansion of core strategies and to embrace new strategies and
functions of tuberculosis programmes. Pillar technologies for providing universal access to
one comprises patient-centred interventions drug susceptibility testing; to expand services
required for tuberculosis care and prevention. to manage tuberculosis among children;
The national tuberculosis programme, or to provide additional outreach services to
equivalent, needs to engage and coordinate underserved and vulnerable populations;
closely with other public health programmes, and to embark on systematic screening
social support programmes, public and private and preventive treatment of relevant high-
health care providers, nongovernmental and risk groups all in partnership with relevant
civil society organizations, communities and stakeholders. Use of innovative information
patient associations in order to help ensure and communication technologies for health
provision of high-quality, integrated, patient- (eHealth and mHealth) could particularly help
centred tuberculosis care and prevention to improve tuberculosis care provision including
across the health system. Pillar one is meant logistics and surveillance.
to help countries to progress from previous

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PILLAR 1
INTEGRATED, PATIENT-CENTRED CARE
AND PREVENTION

How pillar 1 works : Key actions

A. Early diagnosis B. Treatment of


of TB including all people with TB
universal drug- including drug-
susceptibility resistant TB, and
testing, and patient support
systematic screening
of contacts and
high-risk groups

D. Preventive C. Collaborative TB/


treatment of HIV activities; and
persons at high risk; management of co-
and vaccination morbidities
against TB

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Early diagnosis systems in many low- and middle-income
countries. Capacity to diagnose drug-

of tuberculosis resistant tuberculosis is limited in most


places where it is sorely needed. Only a
fraction of the estimated cases of multidrug-
including universal resistant tuberculosis receive a laboratory
test to confirm the disease. Adequate
drug susceptibility capacity to diagnose all cases of drug-
resistant tuberculosis is essential to make
testing, and further progress in global tuberculosis care
and control.
systematic screening Scale up introduction of new diagnostics.

of contacts and Wide introduction of new molecular


diagnostic testing platforms will allow early
and accurate diagnosis of tuberculosis and
high-risk groups drug resistance. It could help to diagnose less
advanced forms of tuberculosis and facilitate
Ensure early detection of tuberculosis. early treatment, contributing potentially to
Currently an estimated two thirds of global decreased disease transmission, reduced
incident tuberculosis cases are notified to case fatality, and prevention of adverse
national tuberculosis control programmes sequelae of the disease. Introduction of
and reported to WHO. Ensuring universal the new molecular diagnostics will require
access to early and accurate diagnosis of change of diagnostic policies and training
tuberculosis will require the strengthening at all levels. More sensitive and rapid
and expansion of a network of diagnostic diagnostics will increase the number of
facilities with easy access to new molecular reliably diagnosed patients. The new realities
tests; information and education to prompt of the additional workload will mean lining
people with symptoms of tuberculosis to up additional human and financial resources.
seek care; engagement of all care providers
in service delivery; the abolition of barriers Implement systematic screening for
that people encounter in seeking care; and tuberculosis among selected high-
systematic screening in selected high-risk risk groups. The burden of undetected
groups. Although the current most frequently tuberculosis is large in many settings,
used test for tuberculosis sputum-smear especially in high-risk groups. There can be
microscopy is a low-cost option providing long delays in diagnosing tuberculosis and
specific diagnosis, it significantly lacks initiating the appropriate treatment among
sensitivity. As a result, health services miss people with poor access to health services.
many tuberculosis patients or identify them Many people with active tuberculosis do not
only at advanced stages of the disease. experience typical symptoms in the early
Screening for symptoms alone may not stages of the disease. These individuals may
suffice; additional screening tools such as not seek care early enough and may not be
a chest radiograph may facilitate referral identified for testing for tuberculosis if they
for diagnosis of bacteriologically negative do. Mapping of high-risk groups and carefully
tuberculosis, extrapulmonary tuberculosis planned systematic screening for active
and tuberculosis in children. disease among them may improve early case
detection. Early detection helps to reduce
Detect all cases of drug-resistant the risks of tuberculosis transmission, poor
tuberculosis. Diagnosis of drug resistance treatment outcomes, undesirable health
remains a particular challenge for laboratory sequelae, and adverse social and economic

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consequences of the disease. Contacts of Treat all cases of drug-resistant tuberculosis.
people with tuberculosis, especially children Resistance to medicines poses a major
aged five years or less, people living with HIV, threat to global progress in tuberculosis
and workers exposed to silica dust should care and prevention. Globally, about 4%
always be screened for active tuberculosis. of new tuberculosis patients and about
Other risk-groups should be identified and 20% of patients receiving retreatment have
prioritized for possible screening based on multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. Providing
national and local tuberculosis epidemiology, universal access to services for drug-resistant
health system capacity, resource availability, tuberculosis will require a rapid scale up
and the feasibility of reaching the identified of laboratory services and programmatic
risk-groups. A screening strategy should management. New models of delivering
be monitored and assessed continuously, patient-centred treatment will need to be
to inform a re-prioritization of risk groups, devised and customized to diverse settings
re-adaptation of screening approaches, and contexts. Ambulatory services should
and discontinuation of screening if be given preference over hospitalization,
indicated. Screening strategies should which should be limited to severe cases.
follow established ethical principles for Expansion of services for management of
infectious disease screening, should protect drug-resistant tuberculosis will require bold
human rights, and should minimize the policies and investments to abolish health
risk of discomfort, pain, stigmatization and system bottlenecks that impede progress.
discrimination.
Strengthen capacity to manage
Treatment of drug-resistant cases. The proportion of drug-
resistant tuberculosis patients successfully

all people with completing treatment varies substantially


between countries and averaged 48%

tuberculosis including globally in 2012. Currently available treatment


regimens for drug-resistant tuberculosis
remain unsatisfactory in terms of duration,
drug-resistant safety, effectiveness and cost. New safer,
affordable and more effective medicines
tuberculosis, and allowing treatment regimens that are shorter
in duration and easier to administer are key
patient support to improving treatment outcomes. Linkages
with existing pharmacovigilance mechanisms
Treat all forms of drug-susceptible will contribute to promoting safer use and
tuberculosis. The new tuberculosis strategy management of medicines. Interventions
will aim to ensure provision of services for to improve quality of life for patients while
early diagnosis and proper treatment of enabling adherence to treatment include
all forms of tuberculosis affecting people management of adverse drug reactions and
of all ages. New policies incorporating events; access to comprehensive palliative
molecular diagnostics will help to and end-of-life care; measures to alleviate
strengthen management of smear-negative stigmatization and discrimination; and
pulmonary tuberculosis and extrapulmonary social support and protection. Importantly,
tuberculosis as well as tuberculosis among all care providers managing drug-resistant
children. Key affected populations and risk tuberculosis should have access to continued
groups with suboptimal treatment uptake training and education, enabling them
or treatment success will need to be given to align their practices with international
priority attention in order to accelerate the standards.
decline in case fatality required in order to
reach the ambitious targets for reductions in
tuberculosis mortality.

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Address tuberculosis among children. With to treatment interruption. It must help to
an estimated 500 000 cases and 74 000 alleviate stigmatization and discrimination.
deaths occurring annually, tuberculosis Patient support needs to extend beyond
is an important cause of morbidity and health facilities to patients homes, families,
mortality among children. In countries with workplaces and communities. Treatment
a high prevalence of tuberculosis, women of and support must also extend beyond cure
childbearing age also carry a heavy burden of to address any sequelae associated with
the disease. Maternal tuberculosis associated tuberculosis. Examples of patient-centred
with HIV is a risk factor for transmission of support include providing treatment partners
tuberculosis to the infant and is associated trained by health services and acceptable to
with premature delivery, low birth-weight of the patient; access to social protection; use of
neonates, and higher maternal and infant information and communication technology
mortality. National tuberculosis programmes for providing information, education and
need to address systematically the challenges incentives to patients; and the setting up of
of caring for children with tuberculosis, and mechanisms for patient and peer groups to
child contacts of adult tuberculosis patients. exchange information and experiences.
These may include, for instance, developing
and using child-friendly formulation of
medicines, and family-centred mechanisms Collaborative
for enabling adherence to treatment.

Integrate tuberculosis care within


tuberculosis/
maternal and child health services. Proper
management of tuberculosis among children
HIV activities, and
will require the development of affordable
and sensitive diagnostic tests that are not
management of
based on sputum specimens. Tuberculosis
care should be integrated within maternal comorbidities
and child health services to enable provision
Expand collaboration with HIV programmes.
of comprehensive care at the community
The overall goal of collaborative tuberculosis/
level. An integrated family-based approach
HIV activities is to decrease the burden of
to tuberculosis care would help to remove
tuberculosis and HIV infection in people at
access barriers, reduce delays in diagnosis
risk of or affected by both diseases. HIV-
and improve management of tuberculosis in
associated tuberculosis accounts for about
women and children.
one quarter of all tuberculosis deaths and a
Build patient-centred support into the quarter of all deaths due to AIDS. The vast
management of tuberculosis. Patient-centred majority of these cases and deaths are in
care and support, sensitive and responsive to the African and South-East Asia regions. All
patients educational, emotional and material tuberculosis patients living with HIV should
needs, is fundamental to the new global receive antiretroviral treatment. Integrated
tuberculosis strategy. Supportive treatment tuberculosis and HIV service delivery has
supervision by treatment partners is essential: been shown to increase the likelihood that a
it helps patients to take their medication tuberculosis patient will receive antiretroviral
regularly and to complete treatment, thus treatment, shorten the time to treatment
facilitating their cure and preventing the initiation, and reduce mortality by almost 40%.
development of drug resistance. Supervision
Integrate tuberculosis and HIV services.
must be carried out in a context-specific and
Although there has been an encouraging
patient-sensitive manner. Patient-centred
global scaleup of collaborative tuberculosis/
supervision and support must also help to
HIV activities, the overall coverage of services
identify and address factors that may lead

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remains low. Further, the level and rate of
progress vary substantially among countries. Preventive treatment
of persons at high
There remains a mismatch between the
coverage of HIV testing for tuberculosis
patients and that of antiretroviral treatment,
cotrimoxazole preventive treatment, and HIV risk, and vaccination
prevention. Reducing delays in diagnosis,
using new diagnostic tools and instituting
prompt treatment can improve health
against tuberculosis
outcomes among people living with HIV. Expand preventive treatment of people with
Tuberculosis and HIV care should be further a high risk of tuberculosis. Latent tuberculosis
integrated with services for maternal and infection is diagnosed by a tuberculin skin
child health and prevention of mother-to-child test or interferon-y release assay. However,
transmission of HIV in high-burden settings. these tests cannot predict which persons will
develop active tuberculosis disease. Isoniazid
Co-manage tuberculosis comorbidities preventive therapy is currently recommended
and noncommunicable diseases. Several for the treatment of latent tuberculosis infection
noncommunicable diseases and other among people living with HIV and children
health conditions including diabetes under five years of age who are contacts of
mellitus, undernutrition, silicosis, as well patients with tuberculosis. It has a proven
as smoking, harmful alcohol and drug use, preventive effect but severe side effects can
and a range of immune-compromising occur, especially among the elderly. Although
disorders and treatments are risk factors regimens with similar efficacy and shorter
for tuberculosis. Presence of comorbidities duration have been studied, more evidence on
may complicate tuberculosis management efficacy and safety are needed. More studies
and result in poor treatment outcomes. are also required to assess the effectiveness
Conversely, tuberculosis may worsen or and feasibility of undertaking preventive
complicate management of other diseases. treatment among other high-risk groups
Therefore, as a part of basic and coordinated such as, for example, people in congregate
clinical management, people diagnosed settings like prisons and workplaces, health
with tuberculosis should be routinely care workers, recent converters of a test of
assessed for relevant comorbidities. WHOs infection, and miners exposed to silica dust.
Practical Approach to Lung Healthf is an Management of latent tuberculosis infection
example of promoting tuberculosis care in people with a high risk of developing active
as an integral part of management of tuberculosis could be an essential component
respiratory illnesses. The local situation of tuberculosis elimination, particularly in low
should determine which comorbidities tuberculosis-incidence countries.
should be systematically screened for among
people with active tuberculosis. A national Continue BCG vaccination in high-prevalence
collaborative framework can help integrated countries. BCG vaccination prevents
management of noncommunicable diseases disseminated disease including tuberculous
and communicable diseases including meningitis and miliary tuberculosis, which
tuberculosis. are associated with high mortality in infants
and young children. However, its preventive
efficacy against pulmonary tuberculosis,
which varies among populations, is only
about 50%. Until new and more effective
vaccines become available, BCG vaccination
soon after birth should continue for all infants
except for those persons with HIV living in
f Document WHO/HTM/TB/2008.410; document WHO/
NMH/CHP/CPM/08.02. high tuberculosis prevalence settings.

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PILLAR 2
BOLD POLICIES AND SUPPORTIVE SYSTEMS

How pillar 2 works : Key actions

A. Political B. Engagement of
commitment with communities, civil
adequate resources society organizations,
for TB care and and all public and
prevention private care providers

D. Social protection, C. Universal health


poverty alleviation coverage policy, and
and actions on other regulatory frameworks
determinants of TB for case notification, vital
registration, quality and
rational use of medicines,
and infection control

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Sharing of responsibilities. The second clinical care; protection from catastrophic
pillar encompasses strategic actions that will economic burden due to the disease; social
enable implementation of the components interventions aimed at reducing vulnerability
under pillar one through sharing of to the disease; and protection and promotion
responsibilities. These include actions by and of human rights.
beyond national tuberculosis programmes,
across ministries and departments. Such
actions address medical and non-medical Political
needs of those ill with tuberculosis and also
help to prevent tuberculosis. This will require commitment with
a well-resourced, organized and coordinated
health system with government stewardship
backed up by supportive health policies and
adequate resources
regulations as well as broader social and
development policies. National tuberculosis
for tuberculosis care
programmes, their partners and those
overseeing the programmes need to engage
and prevention
actively in the setting of a broader social and Develop ambitious national strategic plans.
economic development agenda. Similarly, Scaling up and sustaining interventions
leaders in development must recognize for tuberculosis care and prevention will
tuberculosis as being among the social require high-level political commitment
concerns that deserve priority attention. along with adequate financial and human
resources. Continuous training and
Social determinants of tuberculosis. Pillar two
supervision of personnel are fundamental
further includes actions beyond the health
to sustain significantly expanded activities
sector that can help to prevent tuberculosis
for tuberculosis care and prevention. Central
by addressing underlying social determinants.
coordination under government stewardship
Proposed interventions include reducing
is essential. This must lead to, as a first
poverty, ensuring food security, and improving
step, development of a national strategic
living and working conditions as well as
plan embedded in a national health sector
interventions to address direct risk factors
plan, taking into account tuberculosis
such as tobacco control, reduction of harmful
epidemiology, health system structure and
alcohol use, and diabetes care and prevention.
functions including procurement and supply
Tuberculosis prevention will also require
systems, resource availability, regulatory
actions on the part of governments in order to
policies, links with social services, migrant
help to reduce vulnerabilities and risks among
populations and crossborder collaboration,
people most susceptible to the disease.
the role of communities, civil society
Multidisciplinary and multisectoral organizations and the private sector, and
approach. The implementation of pillar two coordination with all stakeholders. A
components demands a multidisciplinary national strategic plan should be ambitious
and multisectoral approach. Accountability and comprehensive, and incorporate five
for pillar two will rest not only with health distinct sub-plans: a core plan, a budget
ministries, but also other ministries including plan, a monitoring and evaluation plan, an
finance, labour, social welfare, housing, operational plan and a technical assistance
mining and agriculture. Eliciting actions plan.
from across diverse ministries will require
Mobilize adequate resources. The expansion
commitment and stewardship from the
of tuberculosis care and prevention across
highest levels of government. This should
and beyond the health sector will be possible
translate into ensuring adequate resources
only if adequate funding is secured. The
and accountability for optimal and integrated

15
national strategic plan should be properly integrate community-based tuberculosis
budgeted with clear identification of gaps care into their work, and widen the network
in finances. A well-budgeted plan should of facilities engaged in tuberculosis care
facilitate resource mobilization from diverse and prevention. Civil society should also
international and national sources for full be engaged in policy development and
implementation of the plan. In most low- planning as well as periodic monitoring of
and middle-income countries, the currently programme implementation.
available resources are inadequate or
sufficient only for modestly ambitious plans. Scale up publicprivate mix approaches
Coordinated efforts are required to mobilize and promote International Standards for
additional resources to fund truly ambitious Tuberculosis Care. In many countries,
national strategic plans with a progressive tuberculosis care is delivered by diverse
increase in domestic funding. private care providers. These providers
include pharmacists, formal and informal
practitioners and nongovernmental and faith-
Engagement of based organizations, as well as corporate
health facilities. Several public sector providers
communities, outside the purview of national tuberculosis
programmes also provide tuberculosis
civil society care. These include, inter alia, large public
hospitals, social security organizations,
organizations, and prison health services and military health
services. Leaving a large proportion of care

all public and private providers out of an organized response


to tuberculosis control has contributed to

care providers stagnating case notification, inappropriate


tuberculosis management, and irrational
use of tuberculosis medicines leading to
Engage communities and civil society. A the spread of drug-resistant tuberculosis.
robust response to end the tuberculosis National tuberculosis programmes will have
epidemic will require the establishment of to scale up country-specific publicprivate
lasting partnerships across the health and mix approaches already working well in many
social sectors and between the health sector countries. To this effect, close collaboration
and communities. Informed community with health professionals associations will
members can identify people with suspected be essential. The International Standards
tuberculosis, refer them for diagnosis, for Tuberculosis Care, other tools and
provide support during treatment and help guidelines developed by WHO as well as
to alleviate stigmatization and discrimination. modern information and communication
Civil society organizations have specific technology platforms can be used effectively
capacities and tuberculosis programmes for this purpose.
can benefit from harnessing them. Their
competencies include reaching out to
vulnerable groups, mobilizing communities,
channelling information, helping to create
demand for care, framing effective delivery
models and addressing determinants of the
tuberculosis epidemic. National tuberculosis
programmes should reach out to civil
society organizations not currently engaged
in tuberculosis care, encourage them to

16
Universal health infection control, vital registration and disease
surveillance systems are powerful levers that

coverage policy, are essential for effective tuberculosis care


and prevention. In countries with a high
tuberculosis burden, these frameworks need
and regulatory to be urgently strengthened and enforced.
The strategy calls for improvements in
frameworks for case several areas outlined below.

notification, vital Enforce mandatory notification


tuberculosis cases. Many tuberculosis cases
of

registration, quality are not notified, especially those managed


by private care providers that are not linked

and rational use to national tuberculosis programmes. Under-


notification of cases hampers disease
surveillance, contact investigation, outbreak
of medicines, and management, and infection control. An
effectively enforced infectious disease law,
infection control or equivalent, that includes compulsory
notification of tuberculosis cases by all health
Move with urgency to universal health care providers, is essential.
coverage. Universal health coverage,
defined as, the situation where all people Ensure recording of tuberculosis deaths
are able to use the quality health services within vital registration. Most countries with
that they need and do not suffer financial a high burden of tuberculosis do not have
hardship paying for them is fundamental for comprehensive vital registration systems
effective tuberculosis care and prevention. and the quality of information about the
Universal health coverage is achieved number of deaths due to tuberculosis is often
through adequate, fair and sustainable inadequate. An effective vital registration
prepayment financing of health care with system has to be in place to ensure that
full geographical coverage, combined each death due to tuberculosis is properly
with effective service quality assurance and recorded.
monitoring and evaluation. For tuberculosis
specifically, this implies: (a)expanding access Regulate the production, quality and use of
to the full range of high-quality services tuberculosis diagnostics and medicines. Poor
recommended in this strategy, as part of quality tuberculosis medicines put patients at
general health services; (b) expanding great risk. Irrational prescription of treatment
coverage, including costs of consultations regimens leads to poor treatment outcomes
and testing, medicines, follow-up tests and and may cause drug resistance. Use of
all expenditures associated with staying in inappropriate diagnostics such as serological
complete curative or preventive treatment; tests leads to inaccurate diagnosis.
and (c) expanding access to services for all Regulation and adequate resources for
in need, especially vulnerable groups faced enforcement are required for the registration,
with the most barriers and worst outcomes. importation and manufacturing of medical
products. There should be regulation of
Strengthen regulatory frameworks. National how medical products are subsidized and
policy and regulatory frameworks for health a determination of which types of health
care financing and access, quality-assured professional are authorized to prescribe or
production and use of medicines and dispense tuberculosis medicines.
diagnostics, quality-assured health services,

17
Undertake comprehensive infection control protect and promote human rights, including
measures. Appropriate regulation is required addressing stigma and discrimination, with
to ensure effective infection control in health special attention to gender, ethnicity, and
care services and other settings where the risk protection of vulnerable groups. These
of disease transmission is high. Managerial, instruments should include capacity-building
administrative, environmental and personal to enable affected communities to express
measures for infection control should be their needs and protect their rights, and to
part of infectious disease legislation, and call to account those who impinge on human
regulations related to the construction and rights, as well as those who are responsible
organization of health faculties. for protecting those rights.

Address poverty and related risk factors.


Social protection, Poverty is a powerful determinant of
tuberculosis. Crowded and poorly ventilated
poverty alleviation living and working environments often
associated with poverty constitute direct
and actions on other risk factors for tuberculosis transmission.
Undernutrition is an important risk factor
determinants of for developing active disease. Poverty is
also associated with poor general health

tuberculosis knowledge and a lack of empowerment to


act on health knowledge, which leads to
risk of exposure to several tuberculosis risk
Relieve the economic burden related
factors. Poverty alleviation reduces the risk
with tuberculosis. A large proportion of
of tuberculosis transmission and the risk of
people with tuberculosis face a catastrophic
progression from infection to disease. It also
economic burden related to the direct
helps to improve access to health services
and indirect costs of illness and health
and adherence to recommended treatment.
care. Adverse social consequences may
include stigmatization and social isolation, Pursue health-in-all-policies approaches.
interruption of studies, loss of employment, Actions on the determinants of ill health
or divorce. The negative consequences through health-in-all-policies approaches
often extend to the family of the persons ill will immensely benefit tuberculosis care
with tuberculosis. Even when tuberculosis and prevention. Such actions include, for
diagnosis and treatment are offered free example: (a) pursuing overarching poverty
of charge, social protection measures are reduction strategies and expanding
needed to alleviate the burden of income social protection; (b) improving living and
loss and non-medical costs of seeking and working conditions and reducing food
staying in care. insecurity; (c) addressing the health issues
of migrants and strengthening cross-
Expand coverage of social protection. Social
border collaboration; (d) involving diverse
protection should cover the needs associated
stakeholders, including tuberculosis
with tuberculosis such as: (a) schemes
affected communities, in mapping the likely
for compensating the financial burden
local social determinants of tuberculosis;
associated with illness, such as sickness
and (e) preventing direct risk factors for
insurance, disability pension, social welfare
tuberculosis, including smoking and harmful
payments, other cash transfers, vouchers
use of alcohol and drugs, and promoting
or food packages; (b) legislation to protect
healthy diets, as well as proper clinical care
people with tuberculosis from discrimination
for medical conditions that increase the risk
such as expulsion from workplaces,
of tuberculosis, such as diabetes.
educational or health institutions, transport
systems or housing; and (c) instruments to

18
PILLAR 3
INTENSIFIED RESEARCH AND INNOVATION

How pillar 3 works : Key actions

A. Discovery, development B. Research to optimize


and rapid uptake of new tools, implementation and impact;
interventions and strategies and promote innovations

19
Enhancing investments in research. Progress but also facilitate their seamless integration
in global tuberculosis control is constrained into ongoing programmes. It is important
not only by the lack of new tools to better that tuberculosis becomes a key domain of
detect, treat or prevent tuberculosis but investigation within national health research
also by the weaknesses of health systems in agendas.
delivering optimal diagnosis and treatment
with existing tools. Ending the tuberculosis
epidemic will require substantial investments Discovery,
in the development of novel diagnostic,
treatment and prevention tools, and for development and
ensuring their accessibility and optimal
uptake in countries alongside better and
wider use of existing technologies. This
rapid uptake of new
will be possible only through increased
investments and effective engagement
tools, interventions
of partners, the research community and
country tuberculosis programmes.
and strategies
Develop a point-of-care rapid diagnostic
Embarking on research for tuberculosis
test for tuberculosis. Since 2007, several
elimination. Revolutionary new technology
new tests and diagnostic approaches
and service delivery models are needed to
have been endorsed by WHO, including:
achieve tuberculosis elimination. This will
liquid culture with rapid speciation as the
require an intensification of research, from
reference standard for bacteriological
fundamental research to drive innovations
confirmation; molecular line probe assays
for improved diagnostics, medicines and
for rapid diagnosis of multidrug-resistant
vaccines, to operational and health systems
tuberculosis; non-commercial culture and
research to improve current programmatic
drug-susceptibility testing methods; light-
performance and introduce novel strategies
emitting diode fluorescence microscopes;
and interventions based on new tools.
and a nucleic acid amplification test for rapid
To highlight the need for reinvigorated
and simultaneous diagnosis of tuberculosis
tuberculosis research and catalyse further
and rifampicin-resistant tuberculosis.
efforts, an International Roadmap for
However, an accurate and rapid point-of-care
Tuberculosis Research has been developed.
test that is usable in field conditions is still
The Roadmap outlines priority areas for
missing. This requires greater investments
future scientific investment across the
in biomarker research, and the overcoming
research continuum. It provides a framework
of difficulties in transforming sophisticated
for outcome-oriented research. A mapping of
laboratory technologies into robust, accurate
the efforts carried out in the various research
and affordable point-of-care platforms.
areas will also be necessary, so as to follow up
on progress made. Embarking on research Develop new drugs and regimens for the
for tuberculosis elimination will require a treatment of all forms of tuberculosis.
multi-dimensional approach informed by The pipeline of new drugs has expanded
stakeholders including scientists, public substantially over the last decade. There
health experts, tuberculosis programme are nearly a dozen new or repurposed
managers, financial partners, policy-makers tuberculosis drugs under clinical investigation.
and civil society representatives. Guided by Bedaquiline, the first new tuberculosis drug
clinical and programmatic needs, such an for decades, was approved in 2013 by WHO
approach should not only help undertake for the treatment of multidrug-resistant
public health oriented research for the tuberculosis. A second new drug, delamanid,
development of new tools and strategies also for the treatment of multidrug-resistant

20
tuberculosis, is in the process of review by
WHO. Novel regimens, including new or Research to optimize
implementation
repurposed medicines and adjuvant and
supportive therapies, are being investigated
and early results appear promising. In order
for further progress to be made, investments and impact, and
are required in both research and capacity-
building to implement trials in accordance
with international standards, and to identify
promote innovations
means of shortening the duration of Invest in applied research. Investments
tuberculosis medicines trials. in fundamental research need to be
complemented with those for applied
Enhance research to detect and treat research that supports rapid adoption,
latent infection. Globally, more than adaptation, and implementation of
2000 million people are estimated to be evidence-based policies. Research aimed at
infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, improving understanding of the challenges
but only 5% to 15% of those infected and developing interventions that result
will develop active disease during their in improved policies, better design and
lifetime. Ending the tuberculosis epidemic implementation of health systems and
will require the elimination of this pool of more efficient methods of service delivery
infection. Research is needed to develop is critical to produce evidence for improving
new diagnostic tests to identify people with current strategies and introducing new tools.
latent tuberculosis infection who are likely Research is also needed to identify and
to develop tuberculosis disease. Further, address bottlenecks to implementation of
treatment strategies that could be safely existing and new policies, and to provide
used to prevent development of tuberculosis evidence from the perspective of patients as
in latently infected persons will also need well as from health systems.
to be identified. These strategies should
include new medicines or combinations as Use research to inform and improve
well as interventions to identify and mitigate implementation. Most innovations cannot
risk factors for progression. Further research be translated into effective local action
will be required to investigate the impact without careful planning and adaptation, and
and safety of targeted and mass preventive partnership with stakeholders. In addition to
strategies. routine surveillance, well-planned and well-
conducted research is required to assess
Aim for an effective vaccine against national and local epidemiological and
tuberculosis. The century-old BCG vaccine health system situations, socio-behavioural
is useful to protect against severe forms of aspects of health care seeking, adherence to
tuberculosis in infants and young children treatment, stigmatization and discrimination,
but has limited efficacy against other forms and to evaluate different implementation
of tuberculosis. Much progress has been models.
made in the development of new vaccines;
currently there are 12 vaccine candidates in Create a research-enabling environment.
clinical trials. More research and investments Fostering better and more relevant
are required to address a series of major operational, health system and social science
scientific challenges and identify priorities research will help implementation and
for future tuberculosis vaccine research. A contribute to the development of national
post-exposure vaccine that prevents the and global policies. For this purpose, good
disease in latently infected individuals will be systems for research prioritization, planning
essential to eliminating tuberculosis in the and implementation need to be in place at
foreseeable future. country level. Indicators to measure progress

21
should include investments in outcomes as stakeholders to work together. An enabling
well as in the impact of research activities. environment for performing programme-
A broad-based, concerted effort is needed based research and translating results into
to develop research capacity, allocate policy and practice is necessary to achieving
appropriate resources, and encourage the full potential of tuberculosis programmes.
ADAPTING AND IMPLEMENTING THE
STRATEGY
from domestic and international sources.
Initiating and Development of new national strategic plans or
modifications to existing ones should take into
sustaining strategic consideration the recommended framework of
the new strategy.
dialogue
Engage all stakeholders in strategy adoption Epidemiological
and adaptation. A first step in adapting and
implementing the strategy would be for Member and health systems
States to hold inclusive national consultations
with a wide range of stakeholders, including mapping
communities most affected by tuberculosis,
in order to consider, adopt and prepare for Undertake a detailed epidemiological
adaptation of the strategy. Blanket application of and health system context assessment. A
a global strategy could be inappropriate if it does prerequisite for adoption of the strategy and
not adequately respond to an assessment of preparation for its adaptation will be a detailed
local needs that is derived from the nature of the assessment of the national epidemiological
tuberculosis epidemic, the health system context, and health system situation. Proper mapping
the social and economic development agenda should provide important information, such
and the expressed demands of the populations at as population groups most affected by the
risk. Furthermore, it must build on the capacities disease and most at risk of developing it; age
of health systems and those of partners. and sex characteristics and trends; prevalence
of different forms of tuberculosis and dominant
Use a multidisciplinary approach. A meaningful comorbidities, including HIV, undernutrition,
implementation of this strategy will demand the diabetes, tobacco use, and alcohol misuse;
involvement of many actors and their sharing important subnational and urbanrural
of responsibilities. The scope of existing variations; distribution and types of care
tuberculosis advisory panels will need to be providers; available social protection schemes
expanded beyond clinical, epidemiological and and their current and potential linkages for the
public health expertise. It will need to include a benefit of tuberculosis care and prevention.
wider range of capacities from civil society and
from the fields of finance and development Collect and use data to improve systems
policy, human rights, social protection, mapping. Some of the information for context
regulation, health technology assessment, the assessment can be derived from routine
social sciences, and communications. The work reporting and, in some countries, from national
to adapt the new global tuberculosis strategy or regional tuberculosis prevalence survey
to national contexts may be an adjunct to results. Other required information may have to
overall national health strategic planning, but be obtained from the review of periodic national
will need a significant and specific effort. programme evaluations, field assessments and
local quantitative and qualitative studies. For
Prepare to develop new strategic plans. this purpose, countries need to build capacities
Countries follow different development planning in order to establish an information system that
cycles. Existing strategic and operational plans monitors the characteristics of the tuberculosis
may need to be modified, building on any epidemic, and make appropriate use of the
new approaches. Detailed national strategic data generated from the system at all levels.
plans are also essential to mobilize funding
23
MEASURING PROGRESS AND IMPACT
Target setting and monitoring of progress in high-income countries with high-performance
implementing each component of the global tuberculosis surveillance and health systems,
strategy are essential. Monitoring should be case notification systems capture all, or almost
done routinely using standardized methods all, incident cases. However, in other countries,
based on data with documented quality. Table routine case notifications provide biased data
2 below provides examples of the indicators due to under-diagnosis (cases not diagnosed)
that can be used to monitor progress in and under-reporting (cases diagnosed by
implementing different components and health practitioners but not reported to public
subcomponents of this strategy. The main health authorities). In such settings, inventory
indicators of disease burden are incidence, studies and capturerecapture modelling may
prevalence and mortality. Given the overarching be used to estimate tuberculosis incidence.
2035 targets of the strategy, particular attention
to measurement of trends in mortality and Accurate measurement of trends in tuberculosis
incidence is required. incidence requires the performance of
tuberculosis surveillance systems to be
Mortality data are critical in order to enable strengthened so that they cover all providers
prioritization of public health interventions of health care and minimize the level of under-
and the measurement of progress made in reporting. WHO has developed a tuberculosis
disease control and the overall health of the surveillance checklist, the standards and
population, including health inequalities. A benchmarks for tuberculosis surveillance
robust national vital registration system that and vital registration systems, to assess
includes recording of data on causes of death a national surveillance systems ability to
is essential for measurement of trends in measure tuberculosis cases accurately. The
mortality due to tuberculosis. Vital registration checklist defines 10surveillance standards that
data can also be used to identify subgroups must be met in order for notification and vital
of the population that have higher mortality registration data to be considered as a direct
over casenotification ratios, thereby allowing measurement of tuberculosis incidence and
targeting of interventions. The quality of these tuberculosis mortality, respectively. Countries
data is documented globally by WHOg and that meet all standards can be certified as
statistical methods can be used to account for having an appropriate surveillance system.
incomplete coverage or miscoding. Countries The WHO checklist should be used to improve
that already have vital registration systems tuberculosis surveillance progressively towards
need to ensure that data are of sufficient the ultimate goal of measuring trends in
quality. Those without such systems need to tuberculosis cases directly from notification
introduce them. An interim solution being data in all countries.
adopted by an increasing number of countries
is the introduction of a sample vital registration Prevalence is a very useful indicator of
system. the tuberculosis disease burden. It is
directly measureable through population-
Globally, incidence is estimated to be declining based surveys.h Prevalence surveys also
slowly, at a rate of about 2% per year. The 2025 provide information that is useful for policy
and 2035 targets mean that, in the post-2015 improvements, in particular those related to
period, great attention will need to be given access to health and to tuberculosis diagnosis.
to measuring how fast incidence is falling. In Measurement of tuberculosis prevalence using
g MathersCD, Fat DM, Inoue M, Rao C, Lopez AD. h World Health Organization. Tuberculosis prevalence
Countingthedeadand what they died from: an assessment surveys: a handbook. Geneva 2011. http://www.who.int/
of the global status of cause ofdeath data. Bull World tb/advisory_bodies/impact_measurement_taskforce/
Health Organ. 2005;83(3):1717. resources_documents/thelimebook/en/index.html.

24
nationwide surveys is not feasible everywhere. surveys at country level and works with countries
Nationwide prevalence surveys are important and other partners to support implementation
for high-burden settings and will be especially and analysis of surveys. The Task Force closely
relevant and useful for direct measurement of monitors the implementation of all surveys to
impact in countries that implemented a repeat ensure international comparability through
or baseline survey around 2015. The WHO the use of WHO-recommended methods
Global Task Force on TB Impact Measurement and standards. The Task Force also assesses
has set criteria for prioritization of prevalence progress towards prevalence reduction targets.

Table 2. Illustrative list of key global indicators for the post-2015 global tuberculosis strategy

COMPONENT ILLUSTRATIVE INDICATORS


PILLAR ONE: INTEGRATED, PATIENT-CENTRED CARE AND PREVENTION
A. Early diagnosis Percentage of people with suspected tuberculosis tested using WHO
recommended rapid diagnostics
Percentage of all tuberculosis patients for whom results of drug susceptibility testing
were available
Percentage of eligible index cases of tuberculosis for which contact investigations
were undertaken
B. Treatment Tuberculosis treatment success rate
Percentage of patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis enrolled on second-line
treatment
C. Tuberculosis/HIV and Percentage of tuberculosis patients screened for HIV
comorbidities Percentage of HIV-positive tuberculosis patients on antiretroviral therapy
D. Preventive treatment Percentage of eligible people living with HIV and children aged under-five who are
contacts of tuberculosis patients being treated for latent tuberculosis infection
PILLAR TWO: BOLD POLICIES AND SUPPORTIVE SYSTEMS
A. Government commitment Percentage of annual budget defined in tuberculosis national strategic plans that is
funded
B. Engagement of communities Percentage of diagnosed tuberculosis cases that were notified
and providers
C. Universal health coverage Percentage of population without catastrophic health expenditures
and regulatory frameworks Percentage of countries with a certified tuberculosis surveillance system
D. Social protection, social Percentage of affected families facing catastrophic costs due to tuberculosis
determinants Percentage of population without undernutrition
PILLAR THREE: INTENSIFIED RESEARCH AND INNOVATION
A. Discovery Percentage of desirable number of candidates in the pipelines of new diagnostics,
drugs and vaccines for tuberculosis
B. Implementation Percentage of countries introducing and scaling-up new diagnostics, drugs or
vaccines

25
THE ROLE OF THE SECRETARIAT
The Secretariat, at all levels of the WHO will continue to strengthen its
Organization, will provide support to Member stewardship role in generating global demand
States in reviewing, adopting, adapting and for research, prioritizing among tuberculosis
implementing their post-2015 tuberculosis research needs, and supporting with partners
strategies, building on the framework the effective conduct of research to inform
provided in the strategy. WHO will draw on its global and national strategy and policy design
comparative advantages in areas of the core and implementation. This will entail further
functions outlined below and use its Strategic work with basic scientists, epidemiologists,
and Technical Advisory Group for Tuberculosis social scientists and innovators in the public,
and regional advisory bodies, as well as the private and academic communities, as well
Organizations governing bodies, in order to as affected populations. It will also mean that
guide, support and evaluate its work. national tuberculosis programmes need to
work with academic partners and associated
WHO will continue its policy and norms-setting research institutions, research-focused public
work, building on a range of available and partnerships and publicprivate partnerships.
future guidance documents on tuberculosis.
The Secretariat will provide the strategic WHO will foster effective partnerships to support
guidance and tools needed for adaptation the work proposed under the three pillars of the
and implementation of the strategy in diverse new strategy. This work in partnership aims to
country settings. These tools will need to support Member States in achieving universal
be iterated as further evidence on effective access to tuberculosis care and prevention and
approaches and best practices becomes in reaching out to vulnerable populations and
available. Periodic guidance will be needed communities most affected by the tuberculosis
on the use of new tuberculosis diagnostics, epidemic worldwide. WHO will work with
medicines susceptibility testing methods the Stop TB Partnership, and will seek out
and new treatment regimens as they become new partnerships that can leverage effective
available. WHO will work with partners to commitment and innovation in the non-health
stimulate further evidence generation and sector driven elements of the strategy.
policy recommendations on how national
tuberculosis programmes can engage in The launch of the Stop TB Strategy 2006
the development agenda to address social 2015 by WHO led to its swift translation into a
determinants of tuberculosis. comprehensive, costed global plan of action by
the Stop TB Partnership. Similarly for the post-
To enable this strategy to have a rapid impact 2015 global tuberculosis strategy, WHO will
and to support Member States, the Secretariat actively support the development of a global
will pursue its core function of technical support investment plan by the Stop TB Partnership,
coordination. It will continue to stimulate outlining activities and defining financing
contributions from partners, at global, national requirements to meet the ambitious targets
and local levels. The tuberculosis technical while achieving the stated milestones on the
assistance mechanism (TBTEAM) managed by way. WHO will work closely with the Stop TB
WHO helps to facilitate and mobilize financing Partnership and will contribute to preparing
for technical assistance by partnering with major the global action and investment plan to guide
development agencies. The gaps in technical post-2015 efforts for tuberculosis care and
expertise among supporting agencies will prevention by providing the required strategic,
need to be filled by collaborating with experts scientific and technical input.
working in global health disciplines beyond
tuberculosis, and by drawing more young
collaborators into the field.

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