Illegal Invaders Spreading TB in USA!

North Shore High School students to be tested for tuberculosis

09:06 PM CST on Tuesday, January 8, 2008


On Monday, 175 students at North Shore Senior High School will take a test none of them had prepared for.

The students will be tested for tuberculosis.

Apparently, a student at the Galena Park school contracted the disease before Christmas.

Health officials say he’s now taking medication and is no longer considered contagious.

http://www.khou.com/news/local/stories/khou080108_tnt_northshoretuberculosis.37132be.html
 
Several test positive for TB exposure at North Shore High

12:50 AM CST on Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Nearly 20 students and staff of North Shore High School tested positive for exposure to tuberculosis, county health officials said Tuesday. Harris County Public Health and Environmental Services officials said 19 of the 150 people testes had a positive skin test result.

That positive result indicates those people were exposed to the virus, health officials said.

Those tested were considered to have had prolonged contact with a teen diagnosed with the disease in December.

http://www.khou.com/news/local/stories/khou080122_tj_tbnorthshore.4bb35c49.html
 
This is a real drag. Essentially the patient is on chemo therapy for a whole year. Somtimes public nurses have to chase after bums on the street; the cure is almost as bad as the disease and people will stop taking it without supervision.
 
Students Get TB Test Results


POSTED: 9:45 am CDT May 7, 2008
UPDATED: 12:34 pm CDT May 7, 2008


GALENA PARK, Texas -- Some students from Galena Park High School received the results of tuberculosis tests they took after a classmate contracted the disease, KPRC Local 2 reported Wednesday.

Student Celeste Ramirez said she passed with flying colors, "At least I know I don't have it."

But parent Rita Culligan said her son's test came back positive.

She said she wonders why he is still able to attend classes," I just don't know why you would want to risk possibly exposing other students and teachers with someone who tested positive."

On Monday, 268 students at the high school took TB tests administered by Harris County health workers. The skin test was a precautionary measure after a student tested positive for tuberculosis early last month. The infected student has been home since April 4 and has been receiving treatment.

Since the testing, some students said the mood at the school has been a mix of calm and concern.

Student Richard Polio said, "A few people were kind of paranoid, but over time they were kind of calming down after teachers and parents talked to them."

The health department said tuberculosis is spread through prolonged exposure to someone who has the germ in their lungs. Exposure is most likely to occur when a person with TB is actively coughing.

Officials said that if a person tests positive for tuberculosis it doesn't mean they have the disease. Students who tested positive will need to a follow-up with their doctor and have a chest X-ray.

http://www.click2houston.com/news/16186516/detail.html
 
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24954041/

Tainted cheese fuels TB rise in California
Unpasteurized dairy products linked to reemergence of ancient disease

By JoNel Aleccia
Health writer
MSNBC
updated 8:37 a.m. ET, Wed., June. 4, 2008

A rare form of tuberculosis caused by illegal, unpasteurized dairy products, including the popular queso fresco cheese, is rising among Hispanic immigrants in Southern California and raising fears about a resurgence of a strain all but eradicated in the U.S.

Cases of the Mycobacterium bovis strain of TB have increased in San Diego county, particularly among children who drink or eat dairy foods made from the milk of infected cattle, a study in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases shows.

But the germ can infect anyone who eats contaminated fresh cheeses sold by street vendors, smuggled
across the Mexican border or produced by families who try to make a living selling so-called “bathtub cheese"� made in home tubs and backyard troughs.

Scientists at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine are warning that improved screening, treatment and public education are necessary to prevent the spread of the disease that now accounts for about 10 percent of all new cases of TB in that border region — and, perhaps, others.

“M. bovis TB is a disease of antiquity,"� said Timothy Rodwell, a researcher who led the study published by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “It is important that it not be allowed to re-emerge as a cause of TB in this country."�

Unlike typical TB, caused by the M. tuberculosis strain, the bovine variety isn’t easily spread through human-to-human contact. It settles less often in the lungs, making it less likely to be transmitted through breathing and coughing, Rodwell said.

Rare strain resists drug
treatment


However, the M. bovis bug is resistant to front-line drug therapy and adults who contract it are more than twice as likely as those with traditional TB to die before treatment is complete.

Researchers studied nearly 3,300 culture-confirmed cases of TB in San Diego county between 1994 and 2005, the study showed. Some 265 of the cases were identified as the bovine TB. Though the number of cases remained small, they increased by nearly 65 percent over time, rising from 17 cases a year to 28 cases a year.

By 2005, more than half the M. bovis cases were diagnosed in children younger than 15, the study said. Nearly all of the cases were in Hispanics, and 60 percent were in people from Mexico. Between 2001 and 2005, 19 adults with M. Bovis died before or during treatment.

That worries TB health experts, who say that the small numbers belie a potentially large problem.

“I wouldn’t want to characterize it as increasing in epidemic proportions,"� said Dr. Kathl
een Moser, director of tuberculosis control programs for San Diego County.

“But it’s clearly being seen, and being seen in places where people drink unpasteurized milk and eat unpasteurized dairy products."�

Demand for Hispanic cheeses has skyrocketed in California, where 108 million pounds of legal, properly pasteurized queso fresco and other cheeses were produced last year, according to the California Department of Food and Agriculture.

Last year, Moser was concerned enough about dangerous, illegal varieties to launch a public health campaign that included ads on Spanish-language television stations and new brochures that warned families to beware of infected cheese.

Officials seize illegal cheese

Agriculture officials have been cracking down on illegally produced cheese, including more than 375 pounds of so-called “bathtub cheese"� seized from an open-air market in San Bernardino last year, according to Steve Lyle, the agency’s director of public affair
s. Such cheeses have been found to be colonized with salmonella, listeria, E. coli and M. Bovis TB.

The problem stems from cattle in Mexico, where M. Bovis infects an estimated 17 percent of herds. In the U.S., the problem is limited to occasional outbreaks among isolated herds. Overall, the U.S. virtually eradicated the M. Bovis variety in the 1900s, Rodwell said.

TB officials in the U.S. want to watch the trend closely. Although there are about 9 million new cases of TB in the world each year and about 2 million deaths, cases in the U.S. have dropped dramatically. More than half of the 13,300 U.S. cases a year are now concentrated in people born outside the U.S.

Rodwell cautioned that people worried about the M. Bovis strain of TB should pay closer attention to dairy products, not people.

“It is NOT a disease you are very likely to get from a foreign-born person,"� he said in an e-mail. “The increase in M. bovis cases is more about what you eat, not where you were born.ÃԠ’Ô�šÃ”š¢
ÃԚ¢Ãƒ¢Ã¢”š¬�Ã…¡ÃƒÆ’”�šÃ”š¬"�
 
Quick cure for these spics

Deport or execute! Both is also good.
 
'Bathtub Cheese' Brings Drug-Resistant TB to Southern California

Tainted cheese fuels TB rise in California

A rare form of tuberculosis caused by illegal, unpasteurized dairy products, including the popular queso fresco cheese, is rising among Hispanic immigrants in Southern California and raising fears about a resurgence of a strain all but eradicated in the U.S.

Cases of the Mycobacterium bovis strain of TB have increased in San Diego county, particularly among children who drink or eat dairy foods made from the milk of infected cattle, a study in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases shows.

But the germ can infect anyone who eats contaminated fresh cheeses sold by street vendors, smuggled across the Mexican border or produced by families who try to make a living selling so-called “bathtub cheese"� made in home tubs and bac
kyard troughs.
:barf2:

Scientists at the University of California San Diego School of Medicine are warning that improved screening, treatment and public education are necessary to prevent the spread of the disease that now accounts for about 10 percent of all new cases of TB in that border region — and, perhaps, others.

“M. bovis TB is a disease of antiquity,"� said Timothy Rodwell, a researcher who led the study published by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “It is important that it not be allowed to re-emerge as a cause of TB in this country."�

Unlike typical TB, caused by the M. tuberculosis strain, the bovine variety isn’t easily spread through human-to-human contact. It settles less often in the lungs, making it less likely to be transmitted through breathing and coughing, Rodwell said.

Rare strain resists drug treatment
However, the M. bovis bug is resistant to front-line drug therapy and adults who contract it are more than twic
e as likely as those with traditional TB to die before treatment is complete.


Researchers studied nearly 3,300 culture-confirmed cases of TB in San Diego county between 1994 and 2005, the study showed. Some 265 of the cases were identified as the bovine TB. Though the number of cases remained small, they increased by nearly 65 percent over time, rising from 17 cases a year to 28 cases a year.

By 2005, more than half the M. bovis cases were diagnosed in children younger than 15, the study said. Nearly all of the cases were in Hispanics, and 60 percent were in people from Mexico. Between 2001 and 2005, 19 adults with M. Bovis died before or during treatment.

That worries TB health experts, who say that the small numbers belie a potentially large problem.


Rodwell cautioned that people worried about the M. Bovis strain of TB should pay closer attention to dairy products, not people.

“It is NOT a disease you are very li
kely to get from a foreign-born person,"� he said in an e-mail. “The increase in M. bovis cases is more about what you eat, not where you were born."�
:rolleyes2:
 
Re: 'Bathtub Cheese' Brings Drug-Resistant TB to Southern California

It Looks Like We Have Another Great Whie Hope.
 
Re: 'Bathtub Cheese' Brings Drug-Resistant TB to Southern California

Our ancestors made or grew all their own food produce and rarely if ever succumbed to such problems. Indeed such diseases and other general morbidities were invariably introduced from outside and quickly dealt with by careful hygiene. So one can only conclude that these creatures are so incomprehensibly vile, filthy and degenerate it goes beyond our normal understanding. Does it not tell us in our ancient texts that God's first weapon of attack is invariably to send plagues and pestilence upon the abominable?. Therefore, what possible benefit are these accursed races to our civilization?.
 
Spic school student spreads TB infection

Riverside Student Diagnosed with TB

RIVERSIDE -- Public health officials are working to identify and screen students and staff at John W. North High School who came into contact with a tuberculosis-infected student.

"We're working very closely with the Riverside County Department of Public Health, following their protocol and guidance on what to do," said Dianne Pavia, spokeswoman for the Riverside Unified School District. "This is very rare. I've been in the district four years now, and this is the first (TB) case I've seen."

Health officials notified the District Friday that a senior at the school had been diagnosed with active tuberculosis, Pavia said. The girl, who has been absent from school since Sept. 12, is "responding well to treatment" at a Riverside hospital, according to Pavia.

Health officials are trying to identify anyone who was in "close and prolonged contact with the student" during the nearly three weeks she was in attendance. The fall term began Aug. 25.

Pavia estimated that as many as 200 students may have been in classes
with the girl. But the RUSD spokeswoman said anyone can request a screening if they're concerned.

"TB testing is being recommended as a precautionary measure, although the risk of transmission is very low," said Frykman. "It is better to err on the side of caution."

Pavia said letters have gone out to parents of students at North High explaining the situation. She said the results of the TB screenings will be known Friday.

According to Frykman, 55 TB cases have been documented in Riverside County this year. There were 80 cases reported last year, he said.

TB is a bacterial illness transmitted through the air when a patient coughs or sneezes. Some people develop latent TB infections that don't reveal any serious symptoms. But other times, it progresses to an advanced stage, with sometimes fatal consequences.

Active TB is often marked by physical weakness, mucus-producing coughs, fever and weight loss.

-----------------------

Greatschools.com: John W. North High School

Hispanic or Latrino 55%
White 20%
African American 16%
Asian 6%
Filipino 1%
Pacific Islander <1%
Multiple or No Response <1%
American Indian or Alaska Native <1%
 
Treatment could be forced upon Champaign TB patient

URBANA – A Champaign man infected with tuberculosis could be ordered today to take treatment and stay isolated.

Judge John Kennedy will conduct a 3 p.m. hearing today at the Champaign-Urbana Public Health District offices. The district has asked that the infected man, a 20-year-old native of Congo, be isolated in his Champaign apartment, wear a mask around others and take three tuberculosis medications.

Court documents identify the man as Clasance B. Botembe and say his girlfriend has been infected with tuberculosis.

"There's a good likelihood" he has infected other people, C-U Public Health District Director Julie Pryde said Tuesday. "Anyone who has an infectious disease lik
e this – it's airborne – needs to remain isolated."

Provena Covenant Medical Center contacted the district on Dec. 1 when Botembe was hospitalized with suspected TB. Dr. Albert England recommended the man, who had been noncompliant with safety measures at the hospital, be confined to his home for the two-week treatment after leaving the hospital.

Two days later, a test confirmed the infection was Mycobacterium tuberculosis, a potentially lethal bacteria that can be spread through the air. Botemebe was discharged that day, with home treatment to begin Dec. 5.

That same day, the state health department told the local district to seek a legal quarantine if the man did not take his treatment.

According to a court document, Botemebe complied with his treatment at first, but refused to stay in his apartment. On Dec. 8, his girlfriend tested positive for tuberculosis.

When Botembe was found to be not complying, a second course of treatment was to begin Jan. 7. A public health
worker found Botembe watching a movie with a friend, without using a respirator mask, "which is required as part of his treatment," the court documents say.

The district held a hearing in his apartment Jan. 16, and served him an order for isolation the next day.

Botembe has not been employed for several months, and Pryde has personally took him groceries in an attempt to help him and to keep him in his apartment, records show.

Pryde said tuberculosis cases have been growing in recent years, but in her 14 years at the district, this is the first time a court order has been sought to force a patient to follow his doctor's advice.

Presiding Judge Tom Difanis said this is the first time he can recall dealing with a case of this kind. A court order presumably has more force than the previous directives of the health district, he said.

"The court can order him to be quarantined. We have to have a facility capable of dealing with the issue, a contagious disease," he said. "It coul
d be a hospital. We can put him in his home and put a (monitoring) bracelet on him. We're limited where we can put him because of the contagious nature of the disease."

Pryde said the county is well-positioned to handle infectious diseases.

"If you have an infectious disease, Champaign-Urbana is a pretty good place to be. We have directly observed therapy and we have access to lots of infectious-disease clinics," Pryde said. "However, if you are a noncompliant person, Champaign-Urbana is not where you want to be. We are going to bring people into compliance. We want people to get better. We want them to do what they need to do to protect other people."
 
Clasance Botembe: Spreading It Around

By Paul Nachman

“Clasance Botembe?"�ÂԚÂ�‚ԚÂ� you think to yourself. What is it? “Animal, vegetable, or mineral?"�ÂԚÂ�‚ԚÂ�

Actually, Clasance is a nigger with tuberculosis who lives in Champaign, Illinois. Now his girlfriend has TB, too. Clasance, you see, hasn’t followed directions public health officials gave him to stay isolated. So the stakes are being raised, as indicated in this article, from the Chicago Sun-Times:

Masked judge orders TB patient isolated in Champaign, Ill.

January 22, 2009
FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A Champaign tuberculosis patient will be tracked by GPS and could go to jail if he violates court orders that he remain isolated while being treated.

Champaign County Circuit Judge John Kennedy imposed those conditions on 20-year-ol
d Clasance Botembe (CLAY-sahnce bo-TEM’-bay) on Wednesday.

Health officials and prosecutors say Botembe failed to take precautions to avoid spreading the disease. Court records say his girlfriend has TB after being exposed to him.

Ventilation was closed in the room at the county Health Department where Botembe appeared. Botembe, the judge and others in the room wore masks.

Botembe will be isolated for 30 days. He could be charged with a Class A misdemeanor if he defies the judge’s order.


But you’re still shaking your head, going “Clasance Botembe?!?!"�ÂԚÂ�‚ԚÂ� aren’t you? The Sun-Times, of course, doesn’t give you a clue, although they do, helpfully, tell you how to pronounce the name. It’s the same with the Boston Herald, the Kansas City Star, and Channel 10 TV in Tampa Bay, among the many media outlets running this Associated Press story.

Well, it turns out that the AP provided a bit of clarifying information that — surprise! — editors at all
those places likely excised (or weren’t curious enough to look for), an example of long-distance groupthink. Here’s a very similar version of the story from the same source as published by the International Herald Tribune, with italics added by me at the key point:

US judge orders TB patient into isolation

The Associated Press
Thursday, January 22, 2009

CHAMPAIGN, Illinois: A tuberculosis patient who failed to take precautions to avoid spreading the illness will be tracked by GPS and could go to jail if he violates court orders requiring him to remain isolated.

Champaign County Circuit Judge John Kennedy imposed those conditions Tuesday on 20-year-old Clasance Botembe, who is originally from Congo.

Health officials and prosecutors say Botembe failed to take precautions to avoid spreading the disease. Court records say his girlfriend got TB after being exposed to him.

Botembe is being treated at home. He, the judge and others wore masks during the hear
ing.

Botembe will be isolated for 30 days. He could be charged with a Class A misdemeanor if he defies the judge’s order.


So … Clasance Botembe! Things turned out just as experienced VDARE readers suspected, right?

There’s a bit more. The American Bar Association covered the story, too, evidently not using the feed from AP. Reading their article, you don’t learn about the Congo connection or how to pronounce Clasance’s name, but there is this cherry atop the sundae:

The Champaign-Urbana Public Health District will pay for Botembe’s rent, food, medication and confinement in a motel or hotel.
 
Congo? How the Hell did he get here?

Virtually all of these damn immigrants from the Third World have been exposed to TB, and are all carrying the dormant bacterium in their dirty lungs.Mexico, Philippines, and all of Africa are full of TB. When this Third World scum gets immuno-compromised...it will return. Look at the 20 million illegals here now, it's only a matter of time before they get sick and spread it to real Americans.Many of this brown scum have multi-drug resistant TB as well.It would be cheaper to shoot this guy, than for "us" to pay to treat this POS. It will easily cost over $10,000 (our tax dollars) to treat him and his active, highly-contagious TB in a negative pressure isolation room at a hospital.At home, he will never be compliant with his treatment regimen, and that's why it will never be eradicated.Niggers and spics are notorius for not being compliant wit
h medication treatment regimens...except for pain killers and illegal drugs.

Hopefully, he will die from this and take his illegal buddies with him.

Thank you diversity lovers. I hope liberals catch it first. Isn't diversity great? Bring more in, huh?
 
Students, Teachers Tested in TB Scare

LONG BEACH -- Some 170 students and teachers at Wilson High School will be tested for tuberculosis after someone on campus was diagnosed with the highly contagious disease.

The Long Beach Unified School District is sending letters to parents explaining how the testing will work.

Robert Tegorda, assistant to the superintendent, says the testing will be conducted in early April.

The school experienced a similar scare in September when 400 students and staff were tested for TB, but Tegorda says the current case is a new exposure.

Officials have not released the name of the individual who has been diagnosed with TB.

Tuberculosis can be fatal if it's left untreated.

The disease is spre
ad through the air when an infected person coughs, sneezes or spits.

Tuberculosis rates in the U.S. are actually declining. However, experts say drug-resistant strains of TB are showing up in states with large immigrant populations and are becoming harder to treat.
 
I question how long a country can exist when suffering an invasion and lacking the courage to discuss this assault. Solzhenitsyn remarked that when the elite disparaged courage as a virtue, a clear end of that society is visible.

http://www.thenews.com.mx/home/tnArt...ve_cont=317532

Quote:
UNAM alums help immigrants


Chicago - The UNAM Alumni Association's Chicago chapter has signed on to a program that will assist capitalinos who have migrated to the midwestern U.S. city.

The Casa de la Ciudad de MAcxico announced a partnership with Chicago residents and former students from National Autonomous University of Mexico, or UNAM, to assist D.F. immigrants with free legal advice on immigration. Casa de La Ciudad de MAcxico director Nancy Oviedo said this was the first step in a program she hopes to grow.

Chicago is home to the secon
d-largest population of Mexicans who have migrated to the United States. Los Angeles is first.

"We're beginning with this program that is designed to give attention to people every 15 days," Oviedo said. Four UNAM-trained lawyers will assist in the project's initial stages.

Juan Carlos Cisneros, the president of the UNAM Alumni Association, said that in the future the program hopes to offer a variety of services to benefit immigrants who have come from Mexico City.

"We are planning on creating workshops, round table and conferences regarding the immigration phenomenon, as well as investigations and studies focused on the problems that stem from that phenomenon," Cisneros said.

As might be expected, the UNAM Alumni Association includes graduates from many different schools of Mexico's largest university. Students studying at UNAM's Chicago campus may at be able to participate in the program at some point in the future.

Currently, the Casa de la Ciudad de MAcxico is wo
rking toward creating an instructional center in the South Side neighborhood of Little Village, or La Villata, which is home to a large Latino population.

UNAM is regarded as the most prestigious universtiy in Mexico. Perhaps an American community college will take them on for their effrontery.
__________________
Remembering American Wars – Occidental Quarterly Summer 2002
http://www.theoccidentalquarterly.co...2/re-wars.html

ARTICLES
http://richardearley.org/
 
This is why I no longer use public toilets..... you never know what kind of nigger, sandnigger or spic that has used them before you.:barf12:
 
Contagious TB reported at Del Rey Elementary school

VICTORVILLE • An individual with contagious tuberculosis has been identified at Del Rey Elementary School, public health officials said Tuesday.

The San Bernardino County Health Department is now evaluating all students, faculty and staff who may have been exposed to the contagious individual, and school officials on Tuesday sent home letters explaining the potential risks to parents, said Don Lester, supervisor of safety and transportation for the Victor Elementary School District.

“A lot of people think it’s like the cold ... but it’s much more difficult to contract than most people think,” Lester said.

All students and staff who test positive for infection next week will undergo more testing and medication to prevent them from developing the active form of TB disease, Lester said. He declined to say whether the contagious individual was a student or staff member due to privacy reasons.

An informational meeting for parents, staff and students is scheduled for 9 a.m. Thursday at Del Rey Elementary School, 15332 Del Rey Drive in Victorville.

----------------

Del Rey Elementary School

pie.page


Hispanic or Latrino 68%
White 12%
African American 12%
Multiple or No Response 4%
Asian 2%
Pacific Islander 1%
Unspecified 1%
 
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2010/12/23/chester-upland-students-screened-for-tb/

Chester-Upland Students Screened For TB
December 23, 2010 12:35 PM

CHESTER, Pa. (CBS) -- A public school in Chester (Delaware County) is dealing with concerns after a student was exposed to tuberculosis. But officials say there’s nothing to worry about.

Two thirds of the kids at the “Science and Discovery”�� satellite campus of Chester High School received tests, and 20 of them came up positive for latent TB, a non-contagious form of the disease that shows up in five to ten percent of the general population.

None of them has an active infection, according to acting Chester-Upland schools superintendent Dr. Joyce Wells. She says a warning from the state health department prompted her to send letters to parents last week in advance of the voluntary tests.

“I met with the students of the school along with our lead nurse,”�� Wells told KYW Newsradio, “to have a discussion about the findings and about tuberculosis.”��

Those who tested positive will get followup x-rays and be encouraged to take medication. The students who did not get tested will be afforded the chance to do so over the holidays.
 
PSU Student Has Tuberculosis

http://www.myfoxphilly.com/dpp/health/psu-student-has-tuberculosis

PSU Student Has Tuberculosis
Updated: Saturday, 10 Dec 2011, 8:59 AM EST
Published : Saturday, 10 Dec 2011, 8:59 AM EST

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. - An 18-year-old female student on Penn State's main campus has been diagnosed with tuberculosis.

Penn State said Friday that the student did not receive medical care for the condition at University Health Services. The school said it confirmed the case by contacting the state Health Department.

University and state health officials are contacting people who have been in close contact with the student. They say they're only recommending testing for only very close contacts.

The school did not identify the student or release any other details.

Tuberculosis is a bacterial infection that usually attacks the lungs. It is spread through the air and can be fatal if not treated properly.
 
http://allafrica.com/stories/201202090280.html

Africa: Highest-Ever Levels of Multi-Drug-Resistant TB Revealed

9 February 2012

London — Hot on the heels of a major study showing malaria deaths are twice what everybody thought comes a WHO study showing the highest levels yet of drug-resistant TB

Following the dramatic new figures on malaria deaths from the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) in Seattle, which I wrote about here and here, we now have new figures for multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis, published in the Bulletin of the World Health Organisation.

It shows the highest-ever recorded levels of MDR-TB. In some countries, 65% of patients who have previously been treated for TB end up back in hospital with a drug-resistant strain.

The clear message is that their TB was not sufficiently well treated the first time around. It has to be said that it is all too easy for this to happen, when each patient has to take a six-month course of treatment.

New, shorter-course drugs are urgently needed. This study ought to give further impetus to the drive to find them.

TB is an area that I know the IHME will be addressing before long, as part of its project, which has taken five years of work so far, to get the best possible handle on global mortality rates from all causes.

They have tackled maternal mortality - their study showed it was lower than thought at a third of a million rather than half a million a year - and given us the first global data on breast and cervical cancer.

Since their director Christopher Murray has been studying TB for 30 years, expect some interesting data from that quarter at some point.

The WHO report is not (necessarily) about deaths, but they are up against the same problems as IHME - the absence of good data or, in some countries, any data.

But a lot of hard work has gone into persuading and helping countries to test for resistant TB strains and record what they are finding, and China has now introduced a nationwide TB survey that will help control the disease in its huge population. Lead author Dr Matteo Zignol, from the Stop TB Department at the World Health Organisation says:

Surveillance of resistance to drugs is the cornerstone of TB control.

Following 15 years of intensive effort, we now have high-quality data for two-thirds of countries in the world. At the same time, we don't know the full extent of the problem because we lack data from many countries, in particular India and most of Africa where the TB burden is high.

Cases of MDR-TB have now been reported in 80 countries and XDR-TB (extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis), which is even harder to treat, in 77. Just under one in 10 (9.4%) of all resistant cases were XDR.

In some countries, nearly 30% of all new cases are drug-resistant, which means the new and harder-to-treat strains are being passed around. Eastern Europe is a concern.

High rates of drug resistance were reported in Belarus, Estonia, the Russian Federation and Tajikistan. Nobody knows how bad it is in Africa, where TB is so prevalent.

Counting the numbers is vital. It shows the scale of the task ahead, says Zignol.

The number of TB patients diagnosed and treated for MDR-TB is increasing worldwide but much remains to be done. In 2010, only 16% of MDR-TB patients were given appropriate treatment.

And without the appropriate treatment, people with drug-resistant TB are highly likely to die.
 
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