The Prague Post - Ukraine's tuberculosis progress 'stopped in one day'

EUR -
AED 4.272818
AFN 75.625431
ALL 96.63435
AMD 443.523657
ANG 2.083065
AOA 1066.894695
ARS 1701.912184
AUD 1.735215
AWG 2.071834
AZN 1.982504
BAM 1.954291
BBD 2.34522
BDT 142.199583
BGN 1.939135
BHD 0.440129
BIF 3446.141901
BMD 1.163462
BND 1.497857
BOB 8.058742
BRL 6.249888
BSD 1.164511
BTN 104.872016
BWP 15.62347
BYN 3.409548
BYR 22803.846938
BZD 2.341821
CAD 1.619248
CDF 2629.423588
CHF 0.931672
CLF 0.026547
CLP 1041.449823
CNY 8.117879
CNH 8.116355
COP 4319.932841
CRC 579.00623
CUC 1.163462
CUP 30.831732
CVE 110.766073
CZK 24.284473
DJF 207.356419
DKK 7.471029
DOP 74.137993
DZD 151.944393
EGP 55.14207
ERN 17.451924
ETB 181.037681
FJD 2.649726
FKP 0.867539
GBP 0.86764
GEL 3.135576
GGP 0.867539
GHS 12.478172
GIP 0.867539
GMD 86.09657
GNF 10192.349359
GTQ 8.923033
GYD 243.430977
HKD 9.069474
HNL 30.707027
HRK 7.533069
HTG 152.505302
HUF 385.606522
IDR 19595.776155
ILS 3.662623
IMP 0.867539
INR 105.022594
IQD 1525.452954
IRR 49010.819177
ISK 147.155069
JEP 0.867539
JMD 184.400137
JOD 0.82494
JPY 183.703648
KES 150.086952
KGS 101.737157
KHR 4676.242687
KMF 493.308117
KPW 1047.146648
KRW 1695.547908
KWD 0.357753
KYD 0.970343
KZT 594.833667
LAK 25170.923593
LBP 104273.013083
LKR 359.981701
LRD 209.01615
LSL 19.271379
LTL 3.4354
LVL 0.703767
LYD 6.315977
MAD 10.741664
MDL 19.736804
MGA 5399.125617
MKD 61.540852
MMK 2443.404393
MNT 4141.779377
MOP 9.350086
MRU 46.43648
MUR 53.996692
MVR 17.987556
MWK 2019.073013
MXN 20.916833
MYR 4.762635
MZN 74.349534
NAD 19.271379
NGN 1663.098957
NIO 42.85306
NOK 11.747011
NPR 167.794826
NZD 2.030297
OMR 0.448917
PAB 1.163696
PEN 3.912766
PGK 4.968195
PHP 68.988663
PKR 325.947913
PLN 4.212022
PYG 7705.752061
QAR 4.236455
RON 5.088869
RSD 117.301003
RUB 92.244961
RWF 1697.125152
SAR 4.362907
SBD 9.459194
SCR 16.181379
SDG 699.826416
SEK 10.711646
SGD 1.497496
SHP 0.872898
SLE 28.068555
SLL 24397.211834
SOS 664.292418
SRD 44.433805
STD 24081.305655
STN 24.496033
SVC 10.18835
SYP 12867.390465
SZL 19.26588
THB 36.538555
TJS 10.840644
TMT 4.072116
TND 3.371134
TOP 2.801337
TRY 49.972192
TTD 7.90372
TWD 36.775047
TZS 2908.229015
UAH 50.224166
UGX 4189.764676
USD 1.163462
UYU 45.304821
UZS 14099.716564
VES 378.104839
VND 30564.135667
VUV 140.765522
WST 3.239095
XAF 655.850786
XAG 0.014558
XAU 0.000258
XCD 3.144314
XCG 2.09856
XDR 0.815668
XOF 655.850786
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.427836
ZAR 19.18319
ZMK 10472.554531
ZMW 22.560346
ZWL 374.634154
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    81.57

    0%

  • CMSD

    0.1900

    23.69

    +0.8%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.8

    +0.43%

  • AZN

    0.6400

    94.65

    +0.68%

  • BCC

    5.0200

    83.05

    +6.04%

  • BCE

    -0.0100

    23.74

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    0.6400

    80.12

    +0.8%

  • GSK

    0.1700

    50.39

    +0.34%

  • RIO

    -3.0600

    81.13

    -3.77%

  • CMSC

    0.2600

    23.27

    +1.12%

  • RELX

    0.7900

    43.14

    +1.83%

  • RYCEF

    0.3300

    17.45

    +1.89%

  • VOD

    -0.3200

    13.5

    -2.37%

  • BP

    0.1600

    34.29

    +0.47%

  • BTI

    1.4000

    55.19

    +2.54%

Ukraine's tuberculosis progress 'stopped in one day'
Ukraine's tuberculosis progress 'stopped in one day'

Ukraine's tuberculosis progress 'stopped in one day'

As Ukraine struggles to cope with the immediate casualties of Russia's invasion, there are fears the war will also ruin the country's progress in its fight against tuberculosis.

Text size:

Ukraine has long struggled with tuberculosis, which was the world's biggest infectious killer before the emergence of Covid-19 and spreads in a similar manner.

Despite being diagnosable and normally easily treatable, the disease kills 1.5 million people a year globally and infects more than 10 million, according to the World Health Organization.

Ukraine records around 30,000 new cases annually and has one of the world's highest rates of drug-resistant tuberculosis, which represented 29 percent of the country's new tuberculosis patients in 2018, according to WHO figures.

But Ukraine has worked to address the problem, in recent years becoming the first country to trial a new pill against drug-resistant tuberculosis, which occurs when the two most powerful antibiotics cannot kill the TB bacteria.

"Before the war, Ukraine had achieved a lot," said Olya Klymenko, who recovered from tuberculosis in 2016 and went on to found an NGO, TB People Ukraine.

"But everything stopped in one day," she said. That day was February 24, when Russian troops invaded Ukraine.

"When the war is over we will start everything not even from scratch because of the damage which occurred to our medical care, to our medical infrastructure," she told a press conference ahead of World Tuberculosis Day on Thursday.

Askar Yedilbayev, the TB unit lead at WHO's European office, said Ukraine was "one of the pioneering countries in response" to the disease in the region and praised its "exemplary work".

He said that, before the war, regional warehouses had been well-stocked and patients had been provided with one-to-two months' supply of TB medication.

But with Russia's invasion, "Ukraine's public health services have been derailed," affecting tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment, he told journalists.

- 'Major health crisis' -

Michel Kazatchkine, former UN special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, said the problem now is getting the medication to patients.

"There will be a major health crisis," he told AFP.

"Ukraine will be left with a totally collapsed health system... diseases such as TB and drug-resistant TB will really surge afterwards," Kazatchkine warned.

Kate White, Doctors Without Borders emergency programme manager in Geneva, said the "extreme burden" of the war has led to resources for TB and HIV patients being diverted to treat the wounded.

Yet another problem is how to continue treatment for those fleeing the violence.

"We've lost track of many of our patients, because they, like so many others in the country, have fled," White told AFP.

Yedilbayev said the WHO was supporting the neighbouring countries in providing healthcare to those fleeing the violence, highlighting that "every second, one Ukrainian child becomes a refugee".

- 'Catastrophic' setback -

The Ukraine crisis comes as the "Covid-19 pandemic has, in just two years, catastrophically set back global progress against TB by a decade," said Jose Luis Castro, president of global health organisation, Vital Strategies.

"Covid-19 halved TB case detection in the country in 2020, and the ongoing war could bring diagnosis and treatment to its knees," he said in a statement.

The WHO has warned that tuberculosis deaths worldwide increased in 2020 for the first time in more than a decade.

This week, the WHO called for vastly increased funding, after global spending on TB diagnostics, treatment and prevention in 2020 was less than half of the target of $13 billion annually by 2022.

Many have called for more efforts to develop a new vaccine against tuberculosis -- the current BCG vaccine is a century old and "completely inefficient for adults," said Lucica Ditiu, executive director of the Geneva-based Stop TB Foundation.

"For 100 years, we didn't manage to get a new vaccine. We saw that Covid was able to motivate the minds and money of people to get a new vaccine in 10 months," she said.

"That is nothing less than we should hope for tuberculosis."

I.Mala--TPP