About 10 million people contract and over one million die from tuberculosis every year, most in countries far away from the wealthy West. But yesterday’s World Tuberculosis Day serves as a reminder that this very curable disease is a global problem – one that’s getting worse. The COVID-19 pandemic shows communicable diseases respect no borders, and TB remains a stubborn feature of Western cities, not just developing nations. With 150 cases per 100,000 people, parts of London in the recent past had higher TB rates than Iraq or Rwanda. Areas of New York City such as Sunset Park or West Queens in 2019 had rates six times the national average, and French experts last year have worried again about “hotspots” in northern Paris.
Three things compound this problem. Before becoming active and infectious, usually attacking the lungs, TB can lie dormant for years. Experts estimate that about one in four people alive today – roughly two billion – carry latent TB and around 10 percent of them will develop active TB over a lifetime. That means the 10 million people who develop active TB every year represent only the tip of the iceberg. The world has many people enduring active TB – and is teeming with latent TB cases constantly morphing into infectious ones.