The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) has released a new form for clinicians to help ensure patients with tuberculosis (TB) can continue their treatment without interruption when moving between countries. This form provides a standardised communication channel across the European Union and European Economic Area (EU/EEA).
The International tuberculosis care transfer form summarises a patient’s essential diagnostic and treatment information, ensuring clinicians have the necessary data to provide timely and appropriate continuity of care across borders.
This will address a critical challenge in the fight against TB, as mobile populations are particularly vulnerable, and cross-border movement can disrupt the long course of TB therapy, which can lead to treatment failure, further transmission, and the development of drug-resistant strains. Recent data show nearly 39 000 cases of TB were reported in the EU/EEA, and just over one-third (36.0%) were of foreign origin (cases born in or citizens of a country different to the reporting country).
Maintaining continuity of treatment is a vital public health measure. Currently, treatment success rates for new and relapse cases stand at just 68%, significantly below the 90% target set by the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This initiative offers a practical solution to help bridge that gap and advance Europe’s efforts towards eliminating tuberculosis.
The form is the result of a collaborative process led by ECDC. Its development used existing national and international tools as its basis, as well as consultations with clinicians and public health authorities from across Europe. It is designed to be concise, user-friendly, and clinically relevant, providing minimum essential data to support patients’ care journeys across borders.
Source : ECDC
Are you living with HIV/AIDS? Are you part of a community affected by HIV/AIDS and co-infections? Do you work or volunteer in the field? Are you motivated by our cause and interested to support our work?
Stay in the loop and get all the important EATG updates in your inbox with the EATG newsletter. The HIV & co-infections bulletin is your source of handpicked news from the field arriving regularly to your inbox.