Audio By Carbonatix
A new patient-friendly Tuberculosis (TB) preventive therapy will soon be rolled out in Ghana and 4 other high-burden TB countries at an affordable price.
This is expected to reduce the number of pills needed for TB treatment from 9 to 3 in a week.
Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, and Zimbabwe are the remaining countries to receive the fixed-dose combination treatment at a cost of US$ 15.
This new TB treatment regime is being rolled out by the International Drug Purchase Facility (Unitaid), the President’s Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
Enough treatment for up to 3 million patients is expected to be made available for eligible countries this year.
The provision of the new treatment will contribute towards the United Nations High-Level Meeting (HLM) target to provide TB treatment to at least 30 million people by 2022.
Director of World Health Organization’s (WHO) Global TB Programme, Dr Tereza Kasaeva, said the WHO welcomed the new fixed-dose combination TB preventive treatment that would reduce the pill burden for people with TB infections while enabling better adherence and outcomes.
He said with the new regime, the WHO looked forward to a surge in action from national programmes supported by donors and partners to scale-up access to TB preventive treatment and reach the UN High-Level Meeting targets.
Director of the Programme Division at Unitaid, Mr Robert Matiru, said the pills’ ceiling price agreement negotiated with Macleods was another example of its commitment to ensure that effective, quality-assured and affordable TB preventive therapies were made available in low and middle-income countries.
He said Unitaid we would ensure a healthy market for all manufacturers that wished to develop and commercialize rifapentine-based products.
People with TB infection, often dubbed latent, have no symptoms, are not contagious and most do not know they are infected.
Without treatment, five to 10 percent of people will develop active TB, the form which makes people sick and can be transmitted from person to person.
Tuberculosis is an infectious bacterial disease that mainly affects the lungs, it spreads when an infected person coughs or sneezes.
In 2019 alone, 10 million people fell ill from TB, close to 1.5 million people died from TB and presently, over 95% of people living in low- and middle-income countries are living with TB.
Latest Stories
-
I’ve not signed or cancelled any number plate contracts — DVLA Boss
8 minutes -
Offinso crash death toll rises to three
9 minutes -
BBC seeks dismissal of Trump’s $5bn defamation lawsuit
19 minutes -
We did international activations ahead of December in Ghana 2025 – Abeiku Aggrey
21 minutes -
‘Have GH¢100,000 or don’t wed’: Duncan-Williams slams lavish weddings
22 minutes -
Decision time for Trump on Iran but what does he ultimately want?
25 minutes -
‘They just kept killing’: Eyewitnesses describe deadly crackdown in Iran
26 minutes -
Armwrestling: Ghana confirmed to host 15th Africa Armwrestling Championship in April 2026
26 minutes -
Supreme Court defers ruling on Kpandai by-election to January 28
27 minutes -
IBF congratulates John Laryea on Continental Africa Featherweight triumph
30 minutes -
Ofori-Atta is embarrassing Ghana, says Martin Kpebu
37 minutes -
Africa Prosperity Network unveils Projet Afrique ahead of APD 2026 in Accra
38 minutes -
ACRR analysis and assessment of the SSNIT 2026 Pension Indexation Report
41 minutes -
If you want 2026 to feel like your happiest year yet, let go of these 7 habits
44 minutes -
Iran official says 2,000 people have been killed in unrest
51 minutes
