Fighting Tuberculosis in Africa: The Current Situation Amidst the COVID-19 Pandemic
Olivier Uwishema, Rawa Badri, Helen Onyeaka, Melody Okereke, Samaa Akhtar, Melissa Mhanna, Bilal Zafar, Amirsaman Zahabioun, et al. (10 authors)
Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness · 2022-06
Abstract
Globally, tuberculosis (TB) is one of the leading infectious causes of mortality, with around 4000 deaths daily. Since the emergence of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Africa, the region has experienced a lapse in responses directed at TB control, because the priority has shifted to interventions aimed at managing COVID-19. In addition to an unprecedented burden on the region's already overburdened health systems, another major public health concern is the clinical similarities between COVID-19 and TB, making TB diagnosis increasingly challenging, which may lead to poor prognosis, especially in people with TB and COVID-19 co-infection. A likely implication is that TB patients may stop attending health-care facilities due to fear of contracting or being diagnosed with COVID-19 or to avoid being stigmatized, invariably resulting in a disruption in their access to health-care services. Therefore, massive global support should be provided for TB endemic countries to respond synergistically and strongly to the thousands of TB cases as well as the COVID-19 pandemic.
MeSH terms
- Pandemic
- Tuberculosis
- Public health
- Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
- Medicine
- Psychological intervention
- Environmental health
- Disease
- Health care
- Infectious disease (medical specialty)
- Infection control
- Intensive care medicine
- Economic growth