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It’s a bit like the old children’s game, Whac-a-Mole. We did a pretty good job of handling covid but now other, even scarier infectious diseases are on the rampage, which means it’s more important than ever to focus on hygiene.
In a week when experts have issued a dire warning about TB, which has just overtaken covid as humanity’s deadliest infectious disease, measles makes an unwelcome return. And syphilis is once more a threat. No wonder our UVC sanitation units are in more demand than ever. Here’s the news.
TB runs riot to spike grave global health concerns
The horror of Tuberculosis is back, one of the world's deadliest infectious diseases, and the biggest-ever clinical trial for TB has been set up to address what’s being seen as a ‘hidden pandemic’ in Africa.
The UK’s Professor Robert Wilkinson has set up a global initiative involving experts across the USA, India, Indonesia, Vietnam, Madagascar, and the Ivory Coast. The task is to create a one-shot vaccine against TB, whose current treatment takes at least six months. If a sufferer stops taking the drugs within the crucial 6 months, the disease can come back in an extremely virulent drug-resistant form.
2005 saw the NHS stopping the BCG vaccine for all children in the UK, replacing it with a jab for children who are most likely to travel to badly affected areas. But the vaccine stops working once a child becomes a teen, leaving them vulnerable. The USA has done a similar thing but unlike the UK, they’re making good progress towards completely eradicating the disease thanks to massive investment and strong contact tracing during outbreaks. It’s not really surprising that, under these circumstances, TB cases from other countries are on the rise in England.
Worst of all, the mutant form of TB we’re seeing on our shores comes with a very high fatality rate, with just short of a third of people dying from it.
Measles sneaks back thanks to covid set-backs
It’s just as worrying to see measles, which has long been the world’s most contagious disease, coming back. Cases plummeted during the worst of covid thanks to social distancing and mask wearing, but the trend is seeing a sharp reversal. Cases are also on the rise globally, a frightening trend since measles can - and does - kill.
Dr Patrick O’Connor is an expert in measles at the World Health Organisation. He defines a disruptive measles outbreak as one with over 20 cases per million people. As each month passes, we’re seeing more nations falling into the category.
Before 1963, when a vaccine was developed, measles infected millions of children worldwide and killed around 2.6 million people every year, mostly the under fives. As more of us were vaccinated, the infection started to disappear. At one point it had completely disappeared from the UK. Now covid has undermined these changes.
The pandemic meant many nations stopped their measles vaccination programmes, wiping out decades of progress. Whereas before covid 86% of children ages less than one had been vaccinated against measles. By 2021 it had fallen top 81%, the lowest since 2008. Covid saw more than 67 million children missing their measles jab over two years and 112 nations saw their vaccination coverage drop.
Now we’re starting to see the consequences, with big outbreaks of measles in Afghanistan, India, Pakistan, Nepal and the Maldives.
Syphilis and other STDs on the rise
Experts say we need to keep an eye open for the symptoms of syphilis which, along with other STIs, is on the up across the UK. Apparently diagnosed cases of infectious syphilis are the highest since 1945, with 392,453 diagnoses of new STIs in England during 2022 alone, up 23.8% since 2021. This ‘strongly suggests’ STIs are on the march again.
Those most at risk of STIs in general are people aged 15 to 24, those most likely to have casual sex with more than one partner. While most STIs are easy to treat with antibiotics, they can cause serious health issues if left untreated.
Kill a huge list of infectious diseases with our UVC sanitisation units
Our powerful UCV sanitising units kill a host of horrible infectious diseases to give you a reliable way to protect your employees, visitors, suppliers and customers. To give your organisation a boost and stay ahead of competitors who aren’t so wise, contact the team for expert insight. You’ll be surprised how affordable it is to keep people safe from infection.