| Literature DB >> 22337859 |
Andreas Sandgren1, Luis E Cuevas, Masoud Dara, Robert P Gie, Malgorzata Grzemska, Anthony Hawkridge, Anneke C Hesseling, Beate Kampmann, Christian Lienhardt, Davide Manissero, Claire Wingfield, Stephen M Graham.
Abstract
Childhood tuberculosis (TB) is a preventable and curable infectious disease that remains overlooked by public health authorities, health policy makers and TB control programmes. Childhood TB contributes significantly to the burden of disease and represents the failure to control transmission in the community. Furthermore, the pool of infected children constitutes a reservoir of infection for the future burden of TB. It is time to prioritise childhood TB, advocate for addressing the challenges and grasp the opportunities in its prevention and control. Herein, we propose a scientifically informed advocacy agenda developed at the International Childhood TB meeting held in Stockholm, Sweden, from March 17 to 18, 2011, which calls for a renewed effort to improve the situation for children affected by Mycobacterium tuberculosis exposure, infection or disease. The challenges and needs in childhood TB are universal and apply to all settings and must be addressed more effectively by all stakeholders.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22337859 PMCID: PMC3409406 DOI: 10.1183/09031936.00187711
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Respir J ISSN: 0903-1936 Impact factor: 16.671
Major challenges of childhood tuberculosis (TB)
| TB is an important cause of child morbidity and mortality, the low priority awarded to childhood TB due to its lower infectivity is inexcusable |
| Accurate surveillance data regarding the burden of TB in children are scarce because it is under-detected and under-reported, this has implications for the quality of patient care and the recognition and attention awarded to childhood TB |
| There is a lack in research and development of improved diagnostic tools, new drugs, easy-to-dose formulations and effective vaccines to prevent all forms of TB in children of all ages |
| Donor interest is lacking and research and programmatic control are under funded |
Key components of the advocacy strategy
| Inclusion of interventions on childhood TB as part of a basic package of care in national strategic plans |
| Resource mobilisation to strengthen childhood TB research and programming |
| Facilitate involvement of civil society as more than just receivers of care |
| Inclusion of children of all ages in basic, clinical and operational research |
| Development or adaptation of indicators for data collection and monitoring and evaluating programme performance for childhood TB |
| Integration of TB prevention, diagnosis and treatment into health services providing care to children and their families |
| Participation of stakeholders from HIV/AIDS and maternal and child health programmes in TB control efforts |
| Involve research institutes, academics, drug regulatory authorities and pharmaceutical industries to move the childhood TB research agenda forward |
TB: tuberculosis.