MEDizzy
MEDizzy
Bhavesh Gahlot
Bhavesh Gahlotover 1 year ago
Fast facts about Tuberculosis

Fast facts about Tuberculosis

*The current state of Tuberculosis infections:* 1. In 2013, nearly nine million people contracted TB around the world 2. In 2013 around 1.5 million TB-related deaths occurred worldwide 3. TB is the leading killer of HIV-infected people. In South Africa, 73% of TB patients are HIV positive 4. In South Africa alone, there was an estimated 500 000 cases of active TB in 2011, the highest stats after India and China 5. TB is the leading cause of death in SA (40 000 - 60 000 deaths a year)), a figure which is slowly decreasing as several interventions are being put in place to tackle the disease. 6. There are two types of TB – latent and active. People with latent TB are not contagious and often show none of the symptoms associated with TB, whereas people with active TB are contagious and may have many of the TB symptoms 7. Across the world 1 in 3 people is infected with latent TB. In South Africa 80% of the population is infected with latent TB and the majority of these people are in the age group 30-39 years old living in townships and informal settlements. 8. 480 000 people developed multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in the world in 2013. In 2012, South Africa reported 14,161 laboratory-confirmed cumulative cases of MDR-TB and 701 laboratory-confirmed cumulative cases of extensively drug-resistant TB (XDR-TB) cases. 9. For the past six years, an estimated three million people are missed every year by the health systems in their country 10. People ill with TB can infect up to 10-15 other people through close contact over the course of a year. 11. The estimated number of people falling ill with TB each year is declining, although very slowly, which means that the world is on track to achieve the Millennium Development Goal to reverse the spread of TB by 2015. 12. The global TB death rate dropped 45% between 1990 and 2013. 13. An estimated 37 million lives were saved through TB diagnosis and treatment between 2000 and 2013. 14. South Africa is one of the three countries (together with India and Ukraine) with the largest increases in multidrug-resistant (MDR-TB) between 2011 and 2012 15. People infected with TB bacteria have a lifetime risk of falling ill with TB of 10%.

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