NewsBite

commentary

Wiping out deadly tuberculosis one less broken promise

Staff at Kelvinator line up for X-ray tests for tuberculosis at the factory in 1950.
Staff at Kelvinator line up for X-ray tests for tuberculosis at the factory in 1950.

The infectious disease that killed the most people last year is one we’ve heard almost nothing about: tuberculosis. In 2022, it likely claimed 1.4 million lives, more than the total Covid toll. And yet, in rich countries – where virtually nobody dies from tuberculosis any longer – attention has moved on.

Even in poor countries, where the wealthier can afford treatment, it is often the poorest, most disconnected and disadvantaged that suffer from this disease.

The world has long promised to do better. As part of the UN’s global goals, known as the Sustainable Development Goals, all nations promised to fix almost every global problem by 2030, tuberculosis among them. That’s not going to happen. With respect to tuberculosis, we will be decades late.

Indeed, we are failing on almost all the world’s 2030 promises. Based on current trends, the world will be half a century late delivering across all its promises. The reason is clear: politicians made an impossible 169 promises, but having 169 priorities is indistinguishable from having none.

Crucial targets on nutrition, education, and tuberculosis are put alongside much more peripheral promises like boosting recycling, more urban parks, and promotion of lifestyles in harmony with nature.

This year, the world will be at halftime for its 2030 promises, yet it will be nowhere near halfway. It is time to identify and prioritise the most crucial goals.

My think tank, the Copenhagen Consensus, is doing exactly that: Together with several Nobel laureates and more than a hundred leading economists, we have been working for years to identify where each dollar can do the most good.

A new, peer-reviewed study shows a dramatic reduction in tuberculosis is not only possible but is one of the most effective priorities heading towards 2030.

Almost a quarter of all people in the world carry the tuberculosis bacteria. Even in rich Europe and the US, every tenth person has it. For most well-off, well-nourished people, it will not develop into disease, but it is a risk for the less fortunate. In that way, tuberculosis is a disease of hunger and poverty.

The Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria.
The Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacteria.

Each year, more than ten million people develop tuberculosis. Because of a lack of resources, in 2021, we only diagnosed about 6 million cases. Almost half the people who are untreated will die. Those who don’t die will continue to spread the infection – on average, actively infected people can infect five to 15 others through close contact over a year.

Moreover, the six million who are diagnosed and offered treatment are in for a rough time. They must take medication for as long as six months. Because the medication clears the immediate tuberculosis symptoms such as fevers and weight loss in a couple of weeks, many will drop out of treatment too early.

When people stop treatment too early, it not only increases the chance the disease can be passed on to others, it also makes the surviving tuberculosis bacteria more likely to develop drug resistance. This means the next phase could require 18-24 months of treatment and will be much costlier.

We can do much better. It’s possible to diagnose many more people and ensure most TB patients stay on their medication. Our new study shows this can be achieved for an additional $US6.2bn ($9.3bn) annually. It is less than what the world has already promised – in 2018, the UN promised to increase funding by about $US7bn-$8bn annually by 2022. Disappointingly, spending since 2018 has declined.

The additional $US6.2bn annually can deliver diagnosis, care, and prevention that will achieve the world’s tuberculosis promises. It would ensure at least 95 per cent of people with tuberculosis will receive a diagnosis. It can provide simple ways to make sure people complete their six months of medication – perhaps with incentives to complete the treatment, such as food, clothing, juice boxes, or gift cards, or through support groups for patients to encourage each other. These days, apps on your mobile phone can also help.

The extra resources will mean high-risk, vulnerable populations will be able to access periodic screening. Over the coming decades, 50 million people will access appropriate treatment and 35 million people will have access to preventive treatment.

This will dramatically reduce tuberculosis deaths by 90 per cent. It will essentially wipe out the disease, as we should have done decades ago. Up to mid-century, the additional resources will allow us to avoid an astounding 27 million deaths, along with untold human suffering. The total benefits, expressed in economic terms, mostly from avoided deaths, would reach $US3 trillion. Each dollar spent will generate $46 of social benefits for the world.

Global dithering has allowed tuberculosis to become the biggest infectious killer. Ending TB is one of the world’s most effective policies. We have promised way too much for 2030, but tackling tuberculosis is one of the few, and most effective, policies we must carry through.

Bjorn Lomborg is president of the Copenhagen Consensus and visiting fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution.

Read related topics:Coronavirus

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/commentary/wiping-out-deadly-tuberculosis-one-less-broken-promise/news-story/57e6d2d5e6ad9956722de41e57a2cfb6