According to the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Global Tuberculosis Report 2024, roughly 10.8 million people “fell ill” with the bacterial infection in 2023. “The continued rise ...
DIslodged by COVID early in the pandemic, tuberculosis is once again the infectious disease that takes the most lives each ...
The highest number of tuberculosis (TB) cases since global monitoring began were recorded in 2023, according to a report published by the World Health Organization (WHO).
Tom Nyirenda is affiliated with European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership -EDCTP. The World Health Organization’s 2024 Global Tuberculosis report reveals a sobering reality.
Five countries, including India, account for over half the global burden from tuberculosis (TB), said the World Health Organization in its latest report, as TB overtakes Covid-19 as the leading ...
The World Health Organization (WHO) 2024 Global Tuberculosis Report issued at the end of October indicates both hopeful progress and daunting challenges in the fight against TB. Cambodia, a ...
The World Health Organization (WHO) published a new report on tuberculosis revealing that approximately 8.2 million people were newly diagnosed with TB in 2023 – the highest number recorded since WHO ...
NEW DELHI: India tops the list of 30 countries with high burden of tuberculosis cases, according to the latest World Health Organisation (WHO) report. The WHO’s Global Tuberculosis Report 2023 ...
A new report has revealed that approximately 8.2 million people were newly diagnosed with TB in 2023 – the highest number recorded since World Health Organization (WHO) began global TB ...
Tuberculosis was the leading killer among infectious diseases in 2023, the World Health Organization said in their 2024 global report. While the number of TB-related deaths decreased from 1,32 ...
The 2024 Global Tuberculosis Report, published last week by the World Health Organization, puts TB back in the top slot with 1.25 million deaths in 2023 compared to 320,000 COVID-19 deaths.
The WHO's report measures progress in two ways: the number of TB-related deaths, and the number of people who become ill.