Worldwide TB Facts
- Tuberculosis has been declared a Global
Emergency – it is one of the world’s top three killer infectious diseases
together with HIV and Malaria.
- 1 person somewhere in the world dies of
Tuberculosis every 16 seconds, despite the fact that it’s a curable
disease.
- Thought Tuberculosis was a disease of the
past? Worldwide more people will
die of TB this year than any other year in history.
- 2 million people a year die of
Tuberculosis. That’s the same
number of deaths as 8 Boxing Day 2005 Tsunamis. Every single year.
- The first drugs to cure TB were invented over 60
years ago and the current drug regime was introduced in the 1960s.
- TB patients have to take their drugs for at
least 6 months. If they stop before
the course is finished they may develop multi drug resistance (MDR-TB).
- Multi-drug resistant TB can usually be cured but
the course of medication lasts for at least two years.
- Tuberculosis is the main killer of people living
with HIV in developing countries.
Yet TB can be cured even if someone is HIV positive – giving them years more life.
- Tuberculosis is one of the oldest diseases known
to man – traces have been found in Egyptian mummies.
- In biblical times the term Leprosy was a
catch-all for skin diseases. Many
of the people thought of as lepers probably had skin TB.
- TB and Leprosy share the same root bacteria and
are cured by similar drugs. More
importantly they also cause the same stigma for patients.
- 24th March is World Stop TB Day every
year. A day to remember 2 million
deaths a year from Tuberculosis.
- TB can affect any part of the body but only lung
or throat TB can be (but are not always) infectious. Most people with
infectious TB stop being so within two weeks of starting medication.
- There’s a difference between active TB and TB
infection. TB infection means that the bacteria are lying dormant in the
body – this is often called latent TB and does not harm the individual or
present a risk of infection to others.
- Only approximately 10% of those with latent
infection develop active disease.
- The World Health Organisation Estimates that one
third of the world’s population has latent TB.
UK TB Facts
- More people are diagnosed each year in this
country with Tuberculosis than with HIV.
- Brent, in West London has a higher rate of Tuberculosis than Azerbaijan
- Every day in the UK at least one person will die of TB – most of
them could have been cured if someone had remembered to think of TB, and
they had been diagnosed earlier.
- Many people think TB was eradicated in the UK. It never was. The lowest number of cases in England and Wales was in 1987 when there were 5086 cases. Since
2000, there has been an average of 7,000 cases and 400 deaths each year in
the UK as a whole.
- The schools BCG vaccination was replaced in 2005
with a risk based vaccination policy. The UK experienced an increase in TB cases despite a
universal BCG vaccination policy. The BCG vaccination gives some
protection to some people but not to everyone. The only effective way to
prevent TB is to treat people who have it and stop them spreading it.
- It’s estimated that you would need to spend over
eight hours in the close company of someone with infectious TB to be at
risk of infection yourself. Even then, if you’re a healthy adult, you’d
only have a 10% chance of developing active TB.