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WHO urges more laboratories be constructed to fight spread of TB PDF Print E-mail
News - Health & Education
Monday, 24 March 2008 06:05
As with other Asian countries, Mongolia is facing increases in tuberculosis cases. At the same time, Mongolia has only one laboratory in the country to assist in the diagnosis and battle to treat the deadly infection. 

The most recent figures, dating from 2006, indicated 4,893 new cases of tuberculosis were diagnosed in Mongolia. At the same time, 4,962 Mongolians were listed as already living with confirmed cases of tuberculosis. 

Of special concern to world health officials are Mongolia’s close neighbors which suffer from some of the world’s highest levels of drug-resistant forms of tuberculosis.

Such cases are mainly found in the states of the former Soviet Union. 

The World Health Organization has said that a vast majority of drug-resistant TB cases go undiagnosed and untreated in Asia as a result of inadequate laboratories. 

Most developing countries rely almost exclusively on the 125-year-old microscopy method to confirm TB cases; however, drug-resistant TB must be diagnosed with "culture methods," which are more expensive and complex, WHO said. 

Shigeru Omi, WHO regional director, called drug-resistant TB in the Asia-Pacific region a "serious situation," adding, "Outbreaks of multi-drug resistant TB are going unnoticed constantly." He noted that without "adequate laboratory support, we don't know what drugs still work. We don't even know the true scale of the problem. 

Pieter Van Maaren, WHO's Western Pacific regional adviser said, "Countries need to do more than upgrade laboratories," adding that labs "have long been neglected, suffering from a shortage of funds, trained personnel and quality assurance systems."

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