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Tuberculosis

You are viewing all content tagged Tuberculosis.  You can also read an overview of MSF's work with Tuberculosis.

Field News | May 6, 2013

Mobile TB Surgery Brings Hope to Armenian Patients

A mobile MSF TB surgery mission has successfully completed surgery on six DR-TB patients in Yeravan, Armenia.

Field News | March 8, 2013

Ukraine: Curbing the MDR-TB Epidemic in Prisons

Ukrainian prisons are a hotbed for the disease, with prevalence rates more than ten times higher than in the rest of society.

Special Report | January 8, 2013

DR-TB Drugs Under the Microscope

This report focuses on just some of the many factors that hamper the scaling up of DR-TB treatment—the limited availability and high cost of quality assured medicines for resistant strains of the disease, owing to an insecure market and insufficient demand; and the research questions that remain unsolved with existing medicines.

Press Release | December 31, 2012

First New TB Drug Approved In 50 Years Must Be Made Widely Available

An important new TB treatment approved by the US Food and Drug Administration must be made available in countries with high levels of the drug-resistant form of the disease.

Press Release | December 31, 2012

Doctors Without Borders Calls for Rapid Introduction of New TB Medicine

The approval by the US Food and Drug Administration of an important new tuberculosis treatment must lead to its availability in countries with high levels of the drug-resistant form of the deadly disease.

Press Coverage | December 31, 2012

Bloomberg: Tuberculosis tablet approved by FDA

 

The Food and Drug Administration has granted accelerated approval for bedaquiline, the first tuberculosis drug to be developed in 40 years. Bedaquiline is "a potential game changer" in treating drug-resistant tuberculosis, according to Dr. Manica Balasegaram, executive director of MSF's Access Campaign.

Press Release | November 15, 2012

New MSF Study of Pediatric TB/HIV Confirms Crisis of Undiagnosed TB Among Children

Data from the largest-ever multinational cohort of children infected with both TB and HIV shows urgent need for better TB tests for children.

Press Release | November 13, 2012

New Test Increases Diagnoses of Drug-Resistant TB and Shortens Time to Treatment Initiation

Results from the largest multi-country implementation of a new rapid TB diagnostic test reveal a growing global crisis of drug-resistant TB.

Field News | October 31, 2012

First Patient Cured of Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis in Epworth, Zimbabwe

Forty-eight-year-old Mary Marizani recently became the first MSF patient in Zimbabwe to conquer multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.

Field News | October 12, 2012

Patient Stories: Tuberculosis in Tajikistan

Two patients being treated by MSF for tuberculosis in Tajikistan tell their stories.

Field News | October 10, 2012

Treating "Family Tuberculosis" in Tajikistan

MSF is adopting new strategies to fight drug-resistant tuberculosis among children and families in Tajikistan.

Voice from the Field | October 10, 2012

Voice From the Field: Tajikistan's "Heartbreaking Mosaic of 'Family TB'"

MSF Nurse Cindy Gibb discusses her experience in Tajikistan, where MSF has opened a new hospital ward to treat children with tuberculosis and their families.

Press Release | September 14, 2012

Global Fund Adopts New Grant Model

The board of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria approved a new funding model, which avoided imposing caps for countries applying for funding. In November, the board will decide on further details pertaining to the new model. 

Voice from the Field | August 9, 2012

Interview: Fighting Neglected Diseases Among Italy's Migrant Populations

MSF is treating migrants in Italy for neglected diseases like tuberculosis and Chagas.

Special Report | April 19, 2012

From the Ground Up: Building a Drug-Resistant TB Program in Uganda

MSF is convinced that the Ugandan government's focus should be on providing comprehensive, decentralized, and community-based care for TB. 

Briefing Documents | March 26, 2012

Issue Brief: Losing Ground

MSF calls on the stakeholders of the Global Fund to convene an emergency donor conference and to open a new early funding window to ensure that the Fund is fully functional in 2012.

Field News | March 22, 2012

Tuberculosis in 2012

This MSF illustration explores the history of TB and multidrug-resistant TB, diseases that affect millions of people worldwide.

Field News | March 22, 2012

The Effects of Tuberculosis

This MSF illustration explains the effects of TB and multidrug-resistant TB, diseases that affect millions of people worldwide. 

Press Release | March 20, 2012

Alarming Scale of Multidrug-Resistant TB Requires Rapid Response

Alarming new data suggest that the global scope of MDR-TB is much more vast than previously estimated, requiring a concerted international effort to combat this deadlier form of the disease 

Field News | March 19, 2012

Cambodia: Improving TB Detection and Treatment in Prisons

MSF is expanding activities in three prisons in Phnom Penh to include basic primary health care in addition to tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS screening and treatment. 

Field News | February 28, 2012

Infographic: The Need For HIV and TB Treatment in Myanmar

Tens of thousands of people living with HIV and tuberculosis  in Myanmar are unable to access lifesaving antiretroviral therapy, a dire situation exacerbated by the recent cancellation of a new round of funding from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria.

Press Release | February 22, 2012

Myanmar: Urgent Action Needed Against HIV and TB

A new MSF report warns that cancellation of global fund grants will have devastating effect in Myanmar.

Op-Eds & Articles | February 22, 2012

Op-Ed: In Myanmar, Loss of Funding for HIV and TB Puts Lives at Risk

While international attention focuses on Myanmar, a health crisis in the country looms large. An estimated 85,000 people infected with HIV in Myanmar are not receiving lifesaving treatment. 

Voice from the Field | February 14, 2012

DRC: "At Night, the Stories . . . Come Back to Haunt Me"

MSF nurse Alice Echumbe describes her experiences as supervisor at MSF's Jamaa Letu family health center.

Press Release | January 30, 2012

As Global Fund Turns Ten, Lack of Political Support to Health Threatens Gains Against AIDS, TB, and Malaria

As the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria marks its tenth anniversary, people living with HIV/AIDS and those delivering treatment took to the streets in response to drastic funding shortfalls.

Voice from the Field | January 19, 2012

India: Providing Health Care in Chhatisgarh

People living in tribal villages in central India are caught up in the conflict between Maoist rebels and government forces. Dr. Rebecca Cuthbert describes how MSF takes the clinics to them.

Field News | December 22, 2011

MSF Steps Up Tuberculosis Support in Cambodia

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is scaling up its tuberculosis (TB) support in the Cambodian province of Kampong Cham while continuing to help shape the nation’s national TB program.

Press Release | December 20, 2011

MSF Releases 'Ten Stories That Mattered in Access to Medicines in 2011'

MSF has released a list of important stories that had an impact on people’s ability to access needed drugs, diagnostics, and vaccines in developing countries in 2011.

Special Report | December 19, 2011

Access to Essential Medicines: Ten Stories That Mattered in 2011

Through its Access Campaign, MSF has been closely following the developments in the world of access to medicines, vaccines, and diagnostics.

Field News | December 12, 2011

CAR: "Central Africa is in a state of health emergency"

"The system seems to have broken down completely. It is hugely dysfunctional at every level."

Op-Eds & Articles | December 1, 2011

HIV/AIDS: What To Tell The Patients Whose Treatment Isn't Funded?

The cancelation of Round 11 of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria undermines the significant progress that has been made in the uphill battles against these deadly diseases.

Field News | December 1, 2011

World AIDS Day 2011: The Thinnest of Lifelines

MSF International President Dr. Unni Karunakara discusses the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria's decision not to accept grant applications this year to support treatment programs due to a catastrophic drop in donor funding. 

Press Release | November 22, 2011

MSF Response To Global Fund Board Meeting

MSF responds to the unprecedented decision taken to cancel a funding round of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria.

Field News | November 17, 2011

Myanmar: Helping HIV Patients Maintain Their Treatment

An MSF outreach counselor in southern Myanmar travels village to village as part of the effort to treat HIV/AIDS and HIV-TB co-infection in the country.

Alert Article | November 1, 2011

A Long Way to go on HIV/AIDS

In early June, world leaders and global health officials gathered at the United Nations for a summit meeting on HIV/AIDS. Among the outcomes was a new treatment target, a plan to get 15 million people living with HIV/AIDS on antiretroviral (ARV) treatment by the year 2015.

Press Release | October 31, 2011

G20 Leaders Should Bail Out Global Health With a Financial Transaction Tax

The financial transaction tax due to be discussed at this week's G20 Summit could help save millions of lives if a portion of it were put toward global health.

Press Release | October 28, 2011

Proposed EU Financial Transaction Tax Should Help Bail Out Global Health

The financial transaction tax proposed by France and Germany could help save millions of lives if a percentage were allocated to global health, MSF said today.

Voice from the Field | October 27, 2011

Pediatric TB: "Check the Child on The Patient’s Knee!"

Dr. Grania Brigden, the advisor on tuberculosis with MSF’s Access Campaign, describes how children with TB that could be treated often go without care because of a lack of effective diagnostic tools and approaches. 

Field News | October 27, 2011

Senzo's Story: Treating Children With Drug-Resistant TB in Swaziland

Every day, Senzo wakes up and walks to catch a bus to the clinic for his daily injection. The injection is part of the complicated two-year-long treatment for his drug-resistant form of TB.

Voice from the Field | October 27, 2011

Pediatric TB: "This Illness is Curable and We Can Defeat It!"

Busiwe Beko who lives in Khayelitsha, South Africa, describes her baby daughter’s successful battle with drug-resistant TB.

Voice from the Field | August 19, 2011

Somalia: Patients Who "On Top of Being Sick, Are Actually Starving" in Marere

An interview with Hussein Sheikh Qassim is the Medical Activities Manager in the Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) hospital in Marere, southern Somalia.

Press Coverage | July 4, 2011

Guardian.co.uk: Fully Sick Bloggers Tell TB As It Is

From Sarah Boseley's Global Health Blog: Multi-drug resistant tuberculosis is on on the rise and hard to cure. Médecins Sans Frontières wants people with the disease to blog about it, to find out what they really need.

Voice from the Field | July 4, 2011

TB & ME Blog

Real stories of people living with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. Today's feature from Swaziland: "I do get a lot of emotional support from my family, but financially we are struggling."

Press Release | March 23, 2011

TB: New Test To Detect More People Who Need DR-TB Treatment

A promising new test will finally help detect more people with drug-resistant tuberculosis, a development that lends greater urgency to solve major problems surrounding the pricing and supply of DR-TB medicines

Voice from the Field | March 23, 2011

TB: A Crisis in the Former Soviet States

Dr Andrei Slavuckij, who has been following the evolution of TB in the former Soviet Union for the past dozen years, discusses the dynamics of the disease in a post-Soviet landscape.

Field News | March 21, 2011

Cambodia: TB is "One of the Biggest Challenges for Public Health"

In Kampong Cham, a small MSF team is working to improve TB care in the provincial hospital and fill gaps in a national system that is struggling to manage the region's high TB burden.

Voice from the Field | March 21, 2011

TB: A New Test Brings Hope

Dr. Francis Varaine, an MSF TB expert, discusses the potential impact of this new test, which greatly improves the detection of drug-resistant TB

Alert Article | January 31, 2011

Photo Essay: Isolation

The World Health Organization estimates that 8,700 people in Uzbekistan are stricken with multi-drug resistant tuberculosis—or MDR–TB—each year. Patients with MDR–TB must endure an even longer, even more painful treatment regimen than the already tedious process patients with drug–responsive TB go through. Due to high costs and the complexity of diagnostics and treatment, most countries with a high TB burden struggle to treat those who need it.

Alert Article | January 31, 2011

Program Update: Somalia

Even a quick glance at Doctors Without Borders/Médecins San Frontières (MSF) updates from Somalia over the past two years shows that the country’s conflict remains as relentless as ever. February 25, 2009: “121 wounded in 24 hours”; June 2, 2009: “218 treated over two weeks”; January 20, 2010: “111 wounded in 3-day period”: February 3, 2010: 89 treated, including 66 women and children, in Mogadishu.

Special Report | December 29, 2010

Access to Essential Medicines: Ten Stories That Mattered in 2010

Through its Campaign for Access to Essential Medicines, MSF has been closely following the developments in the world of access to medicines, vaccines and diagnostics.

Field News | December 17, 2010

Mongolia: Preparing For Another Harsh Winter

MSF's project pilot involved a range of activities that included improving infrastructure in five regional health facilities, providing a back-up supply of essential drugs and supplies, distributing basic first aid kits, and more.

Voice from the Field | November 23, 2010

Eneza Ujumbe: The Voices of Mathare Youth

"Eneza Ujumbe: The Voices of Mathare Youth" is a newsletter written by and produced by young people living with HIV in Mathare, a slum on the edge of Nairobi. MSF runs a clinic in Mathare called the Blue House, which provides healthcare to thousands of people. 

Press Release | November 18, 2010

Swaziland: Dual HIV and Tuberculosis Epidemic Demands Urgent Action

The dual epidemic of tuberculosis and HIV is devastating Swaziland, cutting life expectancy there from 60 to just 31 years of age, MSF said today in a new report.

Press Release | September 27, 2010

Underfinanced Global Fund Will Put Millions At Risk

New York, September 28, 2010 – Country contributions to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria (GFATM)—to be announced at next week’s donor replenishment meeting in New York—are expected to fall far short of the $20 billion needed for the Fund to maintain and expand its grant programs.

Field News | August 9, 2010

Somalia: MSF Begins TB Treatment Program in Rural Areas of Middle Shabelle Region

"Health indicators in Somalia have been known to be, for many years already, some of the worst in the world and TB is not an exception."

Field News | June 14, 2010

Somalia: MSF Opens New TB Facilities in Middle Shabelle

On June 5, MSF opened new TB departments in two of its health centers in the Middle Shabelle region of Somalia. The departments will provide free quality TB services, including testing, treatment, and health education to the communities living in the surrounding areas of Mahaday and Gololey.

Field News | May 5, 2010

Kenya: MSF Hands Over Integrated Care Program for People Living with HIV/AIDS

After ten years of providing integrated healthcare for people living with HIV/AIDS in Busia, MSF is ready to hand over the program.

Field News | March 24, 2010

Ethiopia: TB Treatment in the Somali Region

"They asked, ‘why are you coughing so much? You must be a serious case. Soon you will probably not be with us anymore.’ ”

Field News | March 23, 2010

Swaziland: Children Suffer the Consequences of Poor TB Infection Control

By the time Lindo was three years old, she had developed a constant cough and breathing problems and was too weak to walk

Field News | March 23, 2010

Krygyzstan: Ex-Prisoner who Beat TB Preaches “Patience, Patience, Patience and Don’t Lose Hope!”

One out of three prisoners with tuberculosis is released before the completion of treatment and faces enormous obstacles once outside the penitentiary system.

Field News | March 23, 2010

Lesotho: Inspired by His Grandmother, A Patient Helps Others

Lay counselors are an intergral part of MSF's TB and HIV programs in Lesotho, and each has a story to tell.

Field News | March 23, 2010

Lesotho: A “Well-Spring of Hope” in a Mountain Kingdom Haunted by TB/HIV

The beautiful, mountainous landscape is visible through the windows, but the patients here are all in serious condition, suffering from tuberculosis (TB), the leading cause of death of people living with HIV in Lesotho.

Field News | March 22, 2010

Tuberculosis: An Unfortunate Resurgence

At one time, TB was considered on its way to being eradicated. However, the disease started a frightening comeback beginning in the 1980s and lasting through the present day.

Voice from the Field | March 22, 2010

Tuberculosis: Diagnosing Children, a Terrible Neglect

The World Health Organization estimates that one million children each year develop TB, the vast majority of whom live in resource-poor settings.

Press Release | December 21, 2009

MSF Closes Programs in Turkmenistan after 10 Years

Berlin/Ashgabat, December 17, 2009 - The international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has closed its medical activities in Turkmenistan after ten years of working in the Central Asian country.

Press Coverage | December 10, 2009

CNN: Inside Africa

No doubt strides have been made in giving more people access to anti-retroviral drugs. But will the progress continue? Jim Clancy put that question to Emi Maclean, Director of the Doctors Without Borders Access Campaign.

Field News | November 17, 2009

Kyrgyzstan: MSF Treats Prisoners Struggling with Drug-Resistant TB

Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is on the rise worldwide and kills around 120,000 each year. The treatment of MDR-TB is very time-consuming and has prohibitively negative side effects. Many patients have difficulties remaining in treatment for up to two years and must at the same time endure the social stigma that comes with being infected by the deadly disease.

Voice from the Field | October 29, 2009

Patient Story: “This painful treatment is my only way out of drug-resistant TB”

“I understand what other patients are going through because, after all, I am also a patient. I take a minimum of 15 pills each day just to fight against drug-resistant TB."

Field News | October 28, 2009

Swaziland: An MSF Doctor Explains HIV-TB Co-Infection

MSF doctor Hermann Reuter works in a tuberculosis (TB) project in a rural district of Swaziland called Shiselweni.

Special Report | October 28, 2009

HIV-TB in Swaziland: A Deadly Co-Infection Epidemic

Swaziland in Southern Africa is on the brink of a major health crisis due to the killer twin epidemic of HIV-AIDS and TB.

Voice from the Field | October 27, 2009

Patient Story: In Swaziland, “People are scared of me”

Nikiwe, 30 years old, was diagnosed in early 2009 with drug-resistant tuberculosis (TB). Here, he talks about the daily struggle of being infected and the shame he feels living with his illness in a fearful community.

Press Release | October 21, 2009

European Countries Dramatically Underfunding TB Research

Stockholm, October 21, 2009 – The largest European countries are lagging far behind the United States in funding of tuberculosis (TB) research and development. As such they bear a responsibility for the painfully slow progress in finding new TB tests and treatments, according to a report released today by the medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). The report shows that all European countries in the analysis—with the exception of Sweden-- have failed to prioritize TB and are contributing to huge global underfunding at a time when 1.7 million people die every year from the disease.

Field News | October 20, 2009

Chechnya: MSF Hands Over TB Dispensaries

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is starting the process of gradually handing over its tuberculosis (TB) program in Chechnya.

Press Coverage | July 28, 2009

New York Times: New Effort to Fight TB in South Africa

Busisiwe Beko, a gregarious community health worker for MSF, set out on foot into Khayelitsha, a vast township of 500,000 people in South Africa, to hunt for one particular ailing young woman.

Field News | May 5, 2009

MSF Hands Over Transnistria HIV/AIDS Projects

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has announced the closure of HIV/AIDS-treatment projects in Transnistria, a breakaway region of Moldova unrecognized by the international community.

Special Report | March 23, 2009

Tuberculosis: New Faces of an Old Disease

On World TB Day this year, MSF focusses on the urgent need for TB tests to deliver faster and accurate results, for all patients, even in the remotest settings. Patients from Kenya, India and Georgia tell their stories of how TB tests today are failing them.

Field News | March 23, 2009

What Should a New TB Test Look Like?

On March 17-18, 2009, MSF brought together a number of doctors, lab workers, community activists and test developers to answer this question. MSF Access Campaign Director Dr. Tido von Schoen-Angerer talks us through what is needed in a new TB test and explains why we can’t settle for anything less.

Press Release | February 24, 2009

MSF Successfully Hands over HIV/AIDS Project in Transnistria

Amsterdam/Chisinau, February 24, 2009 — Today, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) called on the Moldovan and Transnistrian authorities as well as the international donor community to pay more attention to the health needs of the population of Transnistria.

Field News | February 10, 2009

China: MSF Halts Efforts in Opening MDR-TB Program in Inner-Mongolia

After attempting for almost two years to reach an agreement with China’s tuberculosis (TB) control program, MSF has given up on its efforts to start a project in Inner-Mongolia for assisting people suffering from multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB).

Field News | February 6, 2009

Georgia: Nine Drug-Resistant TB Patients Complete Two-Year Drug Regimen

In Zugdidi, Georgia, nine patients suffering from resistant forms of tuberculosis (TB) have completed their treatment after two years of adhering to a daily drug regimen. Jocelyne Madrilène, MSF head of mission in Zugdidi, explains why these recoveries are satisfying for the patients and the entire medical staff.

Top Ten Humantarian Crises | December 31, 2008

HIV/TB Co-Infection Poses Health Battle on Two Fronts

Every year, tuberculosis (TB) kills about 1.7 million people and 9 million develop active disease. TB is on the rise in countries with high HIV rates, particularly in southern Africa, which has the highest rates of HIV. Tuberculosis is one of the leading causes of death for people living with HIV/AIDS, and in the past 15 years, new TB cases have tripled in countries with high HIV prevalence. People living with HIV/AIDS are up to 50 times more likely to develop active TB in a given year compared with HIV-negative individuals, and roughly a third of the 33 million people living with HIV/AIDS worldwide are infected with latent TB. Yet, in 2006 less than one percent of people living with HIV/AIDS were screened for TB.

Field News | November 12, 2008

MSF TB Research Funding Report: November 08

Every day the medical teams of Médecins Sans Frontières come up against the obstacle of inadequate or ineffective tools needed to treat, detect or prevent disease – especially those diseases that predominantly occur in poor countries, such as tuberculosis, malaria or other neglected infectious diseases.

Field News | August 14, 2008

Georgia: Water, Basic Supplies Needed in Conflict Areas

In Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia, and Gori, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) program manager Filipe Ribero has conducted several evaluations at sites where displaced persons are living. In the field, Ribero reports, there is a sharp contrast between a massive influx of international aid and the limited opportunities—for now—to provide assistance.

Field News | August 1, 2008

HIV-TB Co-infection: They're already sitting in our waiting rooms

Dr Eric Goemaere, medical co-ordinator for MSF in South Africa, discusses diagnosing and managing HIV-TB co-infection.

Field News | August 1, 2008

Confronting HIV-TB Co-infection in Lesotho

Dr. Peter Saranchuk was the medical coordinator at MSF’s HIV/AIDS project in Lesotho. Here, he explains the reasons behind the dangerous relationship between TB and HIV.

Alert Article | July 21, 2008

Southern Sudan: Dying in Peace

For 21 years, the south of Sudan was the country’s hotbed of conflict, until a peace agreement was signed in 2005. However, the emergency is far from over.

Speech | May 1, 2008

MSF Intervention at IGWG

Field News | March 27, 2008

MSF Fights Tuberculosis in China

Field News | March 24, 2008

Tuberculosis: New Priorities, New Challenges

Dr. Francis Varaine is coordinator of MSF’s tuberculosis working group. In this interview, he underlines the urgency of identifying new diagnostic means and treatments suited to MSF’s operating environment. He also discusses MSF's priorities for 2008.

Op-Eds & Articles | February 28, 2008

Fighting Tuberculosis

By Dr. Tido von Schoen-Angerer
Executive director
Access to Essential Medicines Campaign
Doctors Without Borders

Press Release | December 20, 2007

Doctors Without Borders Releases Tenth Annual "Top Ten" Most Underreported Humanitarian Stories of 2007

New York, December 20, 2007 — People struggling to survive violence, forced displacement, and disease in the Central African Republic (CAR), Somalia, Sri Lanka, and elsewhere often went underreported in the news this year and much of the past decade, according to the 10th annual list of the “Top Ten” Most Underreported Humanitarian Stories, released today by the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Symposiums | November 7, 2007

TB: Dying for a Test

This symposium aims to discuss how to improve current practices with the tools that exist today and to explore the implementation of emerging technologies and applications. Participants will also be invited to analyse the roadblocks holding up the development and implementation of improved TB/MDR-TB testing and contribute to developing strategies for challenging stakeholders to overcome these obstacles and put an end to the global neglect of these issues.

Press Release | November 6, 2007

MSF and TB Experts Call for New Approach to Test TB Drugs

Johannesburg, November 6, 2007Drug developers can speed up the development of urgently needed new tuberculosis drugs by adopting a different strategy, the medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) joins international experts in stating today. According to a report published today in the open-source medical journal PLoS Medicine, mimicking the approach used to test AIDS drugs would accelerate the research process, and get drugs to patients who most need them, faster.

Field News | March 23, 2007

Monica's Two Daily Struggles: Fighting Resistant Tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS in Nairobi's Mathare Slum

MSF began treating MDR-TB in Kenya in May of 2006. With four patients enrolled at "Blue House" and three on the shores of Lake Victoria in a town called Homa Bay, MSF remains the only provider of MDR-TB treatment in the country today. Around Nairobi alone, it is estimated there are about 50 cases, but there is no capacity to absorb them.

Field News | March 23, 2007

"Every day, after I take my drugs, I feel like I have died. After a few hours, I am re-born again."

In Karakalpakstan, a semi-autonomous region of Uzbekistan, MSF has been running a project treating multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) since 2003. MDR-TB is a debilitating disease and requires lengthy treatment with a complex combination of toxic drugs, which often have appalling side effects.

Press Release | March 22, 2007

Tuberculosis: Fighting a Losing Battle

New York, March 22, 2007 – The international medical organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) today released statistics showing that even under optimized conditions, treatment will succeed in barely more than half of patients with multi-drug resistant (MDR) Tuberculosis (TB). As insufficient research and development on new drugs and diagnostics has left health staff without the right tools to treat the disease, some patients will go on to develop extensively drug-resistant (XDR) TB regardless of the quality of care they are offered. The situation is particularly alarming when treating people co-infected with TB and HIV.

Press Release | January 12, 2007

Tuberculosis Experts Outline Proposals to Speed Up Drug Development

New York, January 12, 2007— Proposals to accelerate the development of tuberculosis (TB) drugs were outlined today at the conclusion of a two-day symposium titled "No Time to Wait," convened in New York this week by the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontires (MSF) with the support of Howard P. Milstein and Weill Cornell Medical College's Abby and Howard P. Milstein Program in Chemical Biology. The symposium brought together more than 100 TB specialists, drug developers and regulators, policy makers, donors and activists to outline practical proposals to fill the gaps in TB drug research and development (R&D).

Press Release | January 9, 2007

Doctors Without Borders Issues "Top Ten" Most Underreported Humanitarian Stories of 2006

New York, January 9, 2007 — The staggering human toll taken by tuberculosis and malnutrition as well as the devastation caused by wars in the Central African Republic (CAR), Sri Lanka, and Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), are among the "Top Ten" Most Underreported Humanitarian Stories of 2006, according to the year-end list released today by the international humanitarian medical aid organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF). The ninth annual list also highlights the lack of media attention paid to the plight of people affected by the consequences of conflict in Haiti, Somalia, Colombia, Chechnya, and central India.

Special Report | December 31, 2006

Top Ten Most Underreported Humanitarian Stories of 2006

Press Release | October 30, 2006

XDR-TB Emergency Will Require New Strategies and New Tools

New York/Paris/Geneva, October 30, 2006 — Relying on the standard World Health Organization (WHO) TB strategies in the face of extensively drug resistant tuberculosis (XDR TB) will be fatal, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warned today. To respond to the XDR-TB outbreak, WHO will need to get newer drugs to patients as soon as possible by ensuring accelerated development of new drugs already in clinical trials. Existing TB drugs and diagnostics are not adequate to combat the disease, and a new analysis being released by MSF as the 37th Union World Conference on Lung Health begins this week in Paris shows that none of the TB drugs currently in development, however promising, will be able to drastically improve TB treatment in the near future. WHO must take the lead in ensuring there is major reprioritisation and increased funding of TB research.

Special Report | October 1, 2006

Development of New Drugs for TB Chemotherapy

With approximately 9 million people developing active tuberculosis (TB) every year and 1.7 million deaths annually, TB is far from under control. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection dramatically increases the risk of developing active tuberculosis and is driving the TB epidemic in Africa.

Briefing Documents | October 1, 2006

Tuberculosis Diagnosis and Drug Sensitivity Testing

Tuberculosis (TB) remains the leading cause of death from a curable infectious disease, despite the availability of short-course therapy that can be both inexpensive and effective.

Field News | May 1, 2006

Tuberculosis Treatment: Needed Breakthrough Won't Happen Without Much Greater Public Investment

With tuberculosis (TB) killing 1.7 million people and newly infecting nine million each year, this curable disease is far from being curbed. The HIV/AIDS pandemic exacerbates TB's scourge through co-infection, as does the increasing emergence of drug-resistant TB. The standard TB treatment available today is long and complex. It relies on drugs developed over forty years ago and takes six months for patients to complete, and the last four decades have brought nothing in the way of improvement.

Field News | March 24, 2006

Treating Multi-Drug Resistant Tuberculosis in Abkhazia: A Doctor's Account

Adrien Marteau is a doctor in the MSF tuberculosis (TB) treatment program at Gluprish Hospital in Abkhazia, located within the borders of Georgia in the Caucasus region. He shares his frustrations as a doctor treating drug-resistant forms of this illness.

Voice from the Field | March 24, 2006

Nurse Gabriela Adao
New Strategies for Treating Children with Tuberculosis in Liberia

It is Brazilian nurse Gabriela Adao's fourth mission with MSF. At Island Hospital, Gabriela is developing alternative adherence tools to make sure that tuberculosis (TB) patients actually take their drugs properly, and ultimately recover.

Field News | March 24, 2006

Children - Forgotten Victims of a Neglected Disease

Each year, TB silently kills about two million people, almost exclusively in developing countries. Among the anonymous victims of the disease, children are literally excluded from international efforts against TB, even though they represent more than 20 percent of the affected population.

Field News | March 24, 2006

A Terrible Burden: Drug Resistant Tuberculosis in Abkhazia

MSF has supported the local branch of the national TB program in Abkhazia since 1996. Since 2001, the program has included treatment for multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB), one of the most frightening health scourges of former Soviet countries.

Briefing Documents | October 20, 2005

MSF Tuberculosis Fact Sheet

Field News | October 19, 2005

Tuberculosis: Breaking the Deadlock

Head of MSF's tuberculosis unit, Dr. Francis Varaine, describes the difficulties involved in treating a disease that kills two million people each year. Current methods for diagnosing and treating the disease are outdated and not fully adapted to children, people co-infected with HIV, or those with multidrug-resistant forms of the disease.

Field News | October 11, 2005

Multidrug-Resistant Tuberculosis: No Tools to Properly Treat People

The very costly and complex treatment for multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is only accessible to a very small minority among the millions of people affected by the disease worldwide.

Field News | August 22, 2005

Treating Ethiopian Nomads Living with Tuberculosis

"The Afar nomads were neither receiving quality TB treatment in the local health system, nor were they welcomed there, as they are a marginalized group with a different language and culture," says Dr. John Pratt, a Welsh general practitioner working at the Galaha TB center.

Op-Eds & Articles | March 26, 2005

An Old Disease Needs New Cures

By Martha Bedelu

Field News | March 25, 2005

MSF Tuberculosis Fact Sheet

Field News | March 25, 2005

MSF's TB Programs

Press Release | March 22, 2005

WORLD TB DAY, MARCH 24, 2005

Geneva/New York, Tuesday March 22, 2005 – Without a simple, rapid test for detecting tuberculosis (TB), care providers in developing countries will continue to miss about half of all the people who need tuberculosis treatment. Efforts to control TB globally will be undermined, said the medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Special Report | March 15, 2005

Running Out of Breath? TB Care in the 21st Century

Field News | January 1, 2005

MSF and Tuberculosis Care in 2004

Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been confronted with tuberculosis since its first day of operation more than 30 years ago. In the past few years, MSF has expanded TB treatment to include patients in a growing number of projects, and the focus has shifted from disease control to patient care.

Press Release | October 26, 2004

TB Spiraling Out of Control

Paris/New York, October 26, 2004 - On the eve of the 35th Union World Conference on Lung Health in Paris organized by the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease (IUATLD), the humanitarian medical organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) warns that millions of individuals in developing countries continue to die from this curable disease and that a radical change is needed in the way TB is tackled globally.

Press Release | March 24, 2004

Global Effort to Stop TB Doomed Without New Drugs and Tests

New Delhi/New York, March 24, 2004 (World TB Day) - The international humanitarian medical organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) today said that we are losing the battle against tuberculosis (TB) because we rely on archaic diagnostic tests and drugs. The HIV/AIDS pandemic has magnified this problem as TB often coincides with, and is made harder to treat by, HIV/AIDS. MSF calls for an urgent increase in worldwide investment in TB research and development.

Ideas & Opinions | March 18, 2004

Tuberculosis Care and Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)

MSF has been confronted with tuberculosis (TB) since its first day of operation more than 30 years ago. In the past few years, MSF has expanded TB treatment to include more patients, and the focus has shifted from disease control to patient care.

Transcript | March 19, 2003

"It's Time for a Faster Cure"

Transcript of Press Teleconference Hosted by the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development.

Transcript | April 22, 2002

The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria: Understanding the First Grant Announcements and Access to Medicines

Transcript of a press teleconference hosted by MSF on the occasion of the Global Fund Board of Directors meeting (April 22-24, 2002)

Open Letters | April 18, 2002

Open Letter to Members of the Board of Directors and Technical Review Panel of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria

On the occasion of the second Board of Directors meeting of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria (Global Fund), scheduled to take place in New York City, April 23-24, 2002.

Field News | March 23, 2002

TB in Prisons: Containing a Catastrophe

Field News | March 23, 2002

TB in Civil Society: Facing a Rising Epidemic

Field News | March 23, 2002

Tracing Defaulters

Alert Article | June 1, 2001

News & Events

Special Report | March 25, 2001

World TB Day 2001

Transcript | March 21, 2001

The World's Tuberculosis Crisis: The Need for New Treatments

Transcript of a press teleconference held on the occasion of World TB Day 2001 (March 24, 2001)

Press Release | March 16, 1999

March 24, 1999 Is World TB Day

Field News | October 26, 1998

News for the Week of October 26, 1998

Field News | March 23, 1998

News for the Week of March 23, 1998