COVID-19
disruption causing many deaths from TB, AIDS in poorest countries, fund
says
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[September 08, 2021]
By Emma Farge
GENEVA (Reuters) - Hundreds of thousands of
people will die of tuberculosis left untreated because of disruption to
healthcare systems in poor countries caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, a
global aid fund said.
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In a few of the world's poorest countries, excess deaths from AIDS
and tuberculosis (TB) could even exceed those from the coronavirus
itself, said the head of the Geneva-based aid body, known as the
Global Fund.
The Fund's annual report for 2020, released on Wednesday, showed
that the number of people treated for drug-resistant tuberculosis in
countries where it operates fell by 19%. A decline of 11% was
reported in HIV prevention programmes and services.
"Essentially, about a million people less were treated for TB in
2020 than in 2019 and I'm afraid that will inevitably mean that
hundreds of thousands of people will die," Executive Director Peter
Sands told Reuters.
While precise death tolls are as yet unknown, Sands said that for
some poor countries, such as parts of the Sahel region in Africa,
excess deaths from the setback in the fight against diseases such as
TB or AIDS might prove higher than from COVID-19 itself.
The Geneva-based Global Fund is an alliance of governments, civil
society and private sector partners investing more than $4 billion
per year to fight tuberculosis, malaria and AIDS. The United States
is its top donor.
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Sands said services were
affected by COVID-19 lockdowns while clinics,
staff and diagnostics normally used for TB were
instead deployed for COVID-19 in countries such
as India and across Africa. He added that he
expected further disruptions this year due to
the Delta variant.
He said the decline in treatment for other
diseases "underscores the need to look at the
total impact of COVID-19 and measure success in
combating it not just by the reduction in deaths
due to COVID-19 itself but to the knock on
impact".
Malaria proved to be an exception to the trend
in 2020, and prevention activities remained
stable or increased compared to 2019, the Global
Fund said.
(Reporting by Emma Farge; Editing by Peter
Graff)
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