[The Dutch contribution to worldwide tuberculosis control: Royal Netherlands Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis (KNCV) Tuberculosis Foundation]
- PMID: 14533503
[The Dutch contribution to worldwide tuberculosis control: Royal Netherlands Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis (KNCV) Tuberculosis Foundation]
Abstract
During the 1960s and 1970s tuberculosis was severely neglected in developing countries. Less than 50% of patients diagnosed were cured. However, an international breakthrough occurred in the 1980s with the excellent results from a short-course treatment: 80% cured. This was first achieved in Tanzania. Since 1993, this innovative approach has been known throughout the world as the 'directly observed treatment, short-course' (DOTS) strategy. Over the past 15 years the interest in international tuberculosis control has substantially improved. There has been a strong increase in the number of initiatives to rapidly extend the use of DOTS so that internationally set targets for tuberculosis control can be met (by 2005, 70% of infectious patients detected and 85% of these cured). The highest priority has been given to the 22 countries with the highest incidence of tuberculosis. There has been a significant increase in the number of countries implementing DOTS. The average rate of cure using DOTS is 80%. Since the 1970s the Royal Netherlands Tuberculosis Association (Koninklijke Nederlandse Centrale Vereniging tot Bestrijding der Tuberculose (KNCV)) has been involved in many international initiatives, such as the Stop TB Partnership, and it has participated in the development and implementation of policies for tuberculosis and tuberculosis-HIV control. However, there are still causes for concern: the number of tuberculosis patients is increasing in particular due to the tuberculosis-HIV co-epidemic and it is estimated that only 1 in 4 infectious tuberculosis patients were detected and treated in DOTS programmes during the year 2000.
Comment in
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[Delay in the diagnosis of tuberculosis].Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2003 Sep 20;147(38):1825-9. Ned Tijdschr Geneeskd. 2003. PMID: 14533491 Dutch.
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