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JOINT TB, TB/HIV INTERNATIONAL MONITORING MISSION IN NIGERIA DEPLOYS
TO STATES

The 2008 mission is of particular importance because it is coming a
year after the TB control programnme received the first $25M tranche
of a Global Fund (GFATM) grant that will eventually total $65.2M.
The team of 62 consultants will visit 14 states over a two week
period to assess the implementation of TB control activities, in
particular the implementation of the Stop TB strategy, and surveys
of TB prevalence and drug resistance.
This year’s mission began on Monday 21 July with a briefing meeting
at the Federal Ministry of Health. Representing the Minister for
Health, Dr Ngozi Njepuome, Director of Public Health, welcomed the
team and urged them to be frank in their assessment of the Nigerian
TB programme.
The team, which comprises partners providing support for the
National TB & Leprosy control programme in Nigeria, includes experts
from WHO, USAID, CDC, PEPFAR, International Federation of
Anti-leprosy Associations (ILEP), and Tuberculosis Control
Assistance Programme (TBCAP) among others.
WHO is fielding nine National Programme Officers supported by three
consultants, Dr Lana Velebit from WHO Geneva, Dr H Wembanyama from
WHO Africa Regional Office and Dr Ineke Petter from TBCAP.
Dr Peter Eriki, WHO country representative, addressing the briefing
meeting, reminded participants that ‘achieving set targets will
require utilisation of innovative approaches if Nigeria is to reach
global targets’. WHO provides support to strategic plan development,
programme implementation and Monitoring and evaluation and Dr Eriki
promised continued support to Nigeria in accelerating the country’s
efforts to meet the global targets.
Dr Njepuome stressed the Government’s determination to be in the
driving seat of the TB programme noting that the National TB
Training Centre had received 250 million Naira of MDG funds. She
also announced an initiative to improve stakeholder and partner
coordination through the launch of a website for the Nigerian STOP
TB partnership which will take place on 1 Sept, 2008 .
The JIMM mission will last until August 1st after which the team
will present its findings to the Federal Ministry of Health.
WHO supports the Nigerian government by:
employment of 9 National Programme Officers to support the NTBLCP;
provision of technical support in all the thematic areas of the its
STOP TB strategy, which include Directly Observed Treatment
Short-course (DOTS) expansion, combined TB and HIV, Multidrug
resistant TB, drug logistics, data management and operational
research); ensuring continuous access of the National TB control
programme to free quality anti-TB drugs from the Global Drug
Facility (GDF) ;supporting resource mobilization effort for TB
control in Nigeria from bodies such as the Gobal Fund to Fight AIDS,
TB and Malaria, USAID and CIDA.
The last ten years has seen a re-emergence of TB in Nigeria due to
increasing poverty and the HIV/AIDS epidemic. In 2006 Nigeria
declared the TB situation a national emergency and launched a
National Strategic Plan to cover TB control activities up until
2010.
Nigeria ranks 5th globally among the 22 high burden countries. The
number of TB cases notified increased from 19,699 in 2002 to 86294
in 2007, however the case detection rate of 32% and the treatment
success rate of 76% is still below the global target.
The TB burden is further complicated by high HIV prevalence of 4.4%,
as measured in the 2005 sentinel survey. The emergence of multi-drug
resistant TB which is not susceptible to the commonly available
drugs is also a major concern, especially as capacity for diagnosis
of MDR TB in Nigeria remains inadequate.
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