 
				
				
						
		| 18 Mars 2013
 GENEVA – 18 March 2013 - The World Health Organization and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and   Malaria said today that strains of tuberculosis with resistance to   multiple drugs could spread widely and highlight an annual need of at   least US$ 1.6 billion in international funding for treatment and   prevention of the disease.
GENEVA – 18 March 2013 - The World Health Organization and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and   Malaria said today that strains of tuberculosis with resistance to   multiple drugs could spread widely and highlight an annual need of at   least US$ 1.6 billion in international funding for treatment and   prevention of the disease.Dr   Margaret Chan, Director General of the WHO, and Dr Mark Dybul,   Executive Director of the Global Fund, said that the only way to carry   out the urgent work of identifying all new cases of tuberculosis, while   simultaneously making progress against the most serious existing cases,   will be to mobilize significant funding from domestic sources and   international donors.  
 With the overwhelming majority of  international funding for tuberculosis  coming through the Global Fund,  they said, it is imperative that  efforts to raise money be effective  this year. Growing alarm about the  threat of multi-drug resistant TB,  also known as MDR-TB, is making that  even more pressing.
 
 “We  are treading water at a time when we desperately need to scale up  our  response to MDR-TB,” said Dr Chan. “We have gained a lot of ground  in  TB control through international collaboration, but it can easily be   lost if we do not act now.”
 
 The WHO and the Global Fund have  identified an anticipated gap of US$1.6  billion in annual international  support for the fight against  tuberculosis in 118 low and middle  income countries on top of an  estimated US$3.2 billion that could be  provided by the countries  themselves. Filling this gap could enable  full treatment for 17 million  TB and multidrug-resistant TB patients  and save 6 million lives between  2014-2016.
 
 “It is critical  that we raise the funding that is urgently needed to  control this  disease,” said Dr Dybul. “If we don’t act now, our costs  could  skyrocket. It is invest now or pay forever.”
 Dr Chan and Dr Dybul  spoke to the media in Geneva in advance of World TB  Day on 24 March,  which commemorates the day in 1882 when Dr Robert Koch  discovered the  mycobacterium that causes tuberculosis. 
 While the Millennium  Development Goal of turning around the TB epidemic  has already been  met, the 2 percent decline in the number of people  falling ill with TB  each year remains too slow.  Two regions – Africa  and Europe -- are not  on track to achieve the global target of halving  the TB death rate  between 1990 and 2015. In 2011, 1.4 million people  died due to TB, with  the greatest per capita death rate in Africa.  Multidrug-resistant TB  (MDR-TB) presents a major threat, with an  estimated 630,000 people ill  worldwide with this form of TB today.
 
 WHO worked with the  Global Fund and the Stop TB Partnership to support  selected high TB  burden countries in reviewing their priorities for the  next three years  and estimating available funding and gaps.  Estimates  have been made  for 118 countries eligible for Global Fund support.  Of  the US$1.6  billion gap in donor financing, almost 60% is for WHO’s  Africa region.
 In the 118 countries, there are four priority areas for domestic and   international investment to drive down deaths, alleviate suffering, cut   transmission and contain spread of drug resistance:
 
 In addition to the US$1.6 billion annual gap in international financing   for the critical implementation interventions above, WHO and partners   estimate that there is a US$ 1.3 billion annual gap for TB research and   development  during the period 2014-2016,  including clinical trials  for  new TB drugs, diagnostics and vaccines.