TB Treatment PNG

Working Together to End Tuberculosis

Ending TB Together

Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the world's leading infectious disease killers. TB is spread from person to person through coughing and sneezing - one person with active, untreated TB can spread the disease to as many as 15 other people in a year. There are 10 million new cases every year, including 1.1 million children, and a total of 1.5 million people died from TB in 2020 As part of the global effort to achieve the SDG 3 target on ending the epidemics of AIDS, TB and malaria, World Vision staff are committed to identifying and treating TB in communities where we work. 

The challenge is, of course, far too large for any one organisation. This is why we carry out our work in close partnership with  governments, funding agencies, other non-governmental organisations, the World Health Organization and local communities.

By far our biggest funding partner has been The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.  World Vision has implemented 47 TB grants from the Global Fund, with a total value of US$265.8 million. In addition, World Vision has implemented 9 joint HIV/TB grants from the Global Fund, with a total value of US$177.1 million. We have been primary recipients for TB grants in Guatemala, India, NicaraguaPapua New GuineaSomalia and Thailand, consistently meeting or exceeding expected performance-based funding results in TB projects. Secondary recipient countries include , and Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kenya, India, Indonesia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Senegal and Thailand.

Projects focus on community systems strengthening using an advocacy and social mobilisation approach to increase case-finding, diagnosis, and enrolment in the WHO-recommended tuberculosis control strategy DOTS (Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course). World Vision also promotes counselling training for social workers, psychologists, doctors, technicians and community health workers who address TB. 

A global challenge

 

In India, our work aims to improve access to quality TB care and control services including increasing diagnosis and treatment for multi-drug resistant TB. The project, through its 6 NGO partners, works through advocacy and social mobilisation in 74 traditionally under-served districts and hard-to-reach populations (approximately 222 million people), and has been particularly successful in increasing case detection among women and children under 14 years of age. To help identify Tuberculosis among children, World Vision India formed the Little Doctors' Club. 

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The children promote activities to improve the health, hygiene and sanitation of the school and community. The awareness they bring helps identify cases and give timely treatment. This Little Doctors’ Club also helped detect TB in one of their own schoolmates. World Vision India is spearheading Little Doctors’ Club across 50 schools engaging 600 children and teachers in the states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.

Family in Somalia

Somalia is one of the world’s most fragile and insecure context. Nevertheless, World Vision and partner agencies have decreased TB incidence there and worked hard  to prevent drug resistance. For a decade, the Global Fund-funded TB project has identified and treated 115,000+ people, has trained 132 health staff in DOTS, and has aided 30 laboratories in TB microscopy leading to 6,505 notified cases of TB registered and reported to the national health authority. The project is building local capacity and a supportive environment for health service delivery through strengthening coordination and partnership development at governmental, district and community level.

Read Kamila's story - she is now on the road to recovery from TB.

Woman with end TB t-shirt

In Papua New Guinea, a focus of recent project work is to ensure availability and access to quality drugs and laboratory diagnostics for TB, HIV, and malaria; to ensure high quality medicines are accessible and affordable to the population; and to establish and improve the quality of laboratory services with an emphasis on primary health care.

Watch as community members, partners - including the National Department of Health - and World Vision staff talk about diagnosing and treating TB in Papua New Guinea. 
More Videos

Video: Treating TB in Nicaragua

Video: Josephine's Story - Overcoming TB stigma in PNG (2:58)

Video: Jonathan's Story - Cured of TB at age 16 in PNG (1:01)

Video: Stepping up the fight against TB on Daru Island, PNG (6:38) - The Emergency TB Project is funded by the Australian Government and the World Bank through the International Development Association, implemented by World Vision and Burnet Institute. 

Video: Stop TB Project in Daru, PNG (5:32) - World Vision works in TB hotspots like Port Moresby and Daru, partnering with the PNG Health Department, the Global Fund and the Australian Government.

Video: A day in the life of a TB treatment supporter in PNG (6:18)

Video: World Vision Myanmar commemorates World TB Day 2018 (1:58)

Video: We all share the same air - World TB Day Message from a former TB patient in Mongolia who is now cured (0:50)

TB Case Studies

Myanmar Case Study: Extending TB Services to Hard to Reach Areas

Empowering Migrants to Reach Migrants in the Fight Against TB in Thailand

TB Reduction among non-Thai migrants (TBRAM) Project

Charity TB Run Article, October 25, 2020: The 4th Charity TB Run Mini Marathon was hosted by World Vision Thailand in collaboration with Thailand's Ministry of Public Health, Thai Health Promotion Foundation, Thai Jogging Federation, and the World Vision Foundation of Thailand. This activity was part of the ‘Stop TB and AIDS through RRTTR’ project that is implemented by World Vision Thailand with financial support from The Global Fund. 

Contact

For more information on World Vision's TB work contact Dan Irvine on Dan_Irvine@wvi.org