Success of the Control of Tuberculosis in Nigeria: A
Review
Patrick O Erah, Winifred A Ojiebau
1Pharmacotherapy
Group, and 2Department of Clinical Pharmacy
and Pharmacy Practice, Faculty of Pharmacy, University
of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria.
3Department
of Clinical Pharmacy and Biopharmacy, Olabisi
Onabanjo University, Ogun State, Nigeria.
*For
Correspondence:
Tel:
+234-805-5263622
E-mail:
erah@uniben.edu or
p_erah@yahoo.com
Received:
05-Feb-09 Revised:
11-Feb-09 Accepted: 12-Feb-09
International Journal of Health Research,
March
2009; 2(1):
3-14 (e214p21-30)
Review Article
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) has emerged as the single leading
cause of death from any single infectious agent and has
continued to be a major public health problem all over
the world. Of the over 14 million cases worldwide
reported by World Health Organisation (WHO) in 2008,
Nigeria ranked fifth in terms of incidence. Depending on
the prevailing social factors such as socio-economic
status of the people, malnutrition, crowded living
conditions, incidence of HIV/AIDS, level of development
of health infrastructures, quality of available control
programmes, degree of drug resistance to anti-tuberculous
agents, etc, prevalence, patterns of presentation, and
outcomes of treatment from TB can vary from one country
to another and from one region of a country to the
other. Attempts to deal with the problems of the disease
led to the development of Directly Observed Treatment
Short Course (DOTS) by WHO in 1995, and more recently
the Stop TB strategy in 2006. In Nigeria, the DOTS
programme has been implemented in all States and local
government areas in the country and 3,000 DOTS centres
have been operating across the country since 2006. This
article reviewed the available information on the
success of the control of TB in Nigeria has observed a
significant improvement in TB detection and treatment.
However, neither the set target for the detection rate
nor the cure rate have been achieved nationally as
several challenges have militated against the effective
implementation of the DOTS programme.
Keywords:
Tuberculosis control, treatment success, DOTS programme,
Stop TB strategy.