TB didn’t just come back. It quietly replaced COVID-19 at the top.
1.25 million dead. 10.8 million infected. Most people never saw a single headline.
While the world moved on, an ancient airborne killer slipped back into crowded buses,
cramped homes, and underfunded clinics.
It preys on poverty, on HIV, on those who can’t aff… Continues…
Tuberculosis never left; it merely lost the spotlight.
As COVID-19 dominated global attention,
TB continued to spread through overcrowded housing, weak health systems,
and communities already exhausted by crisis. Now, with 1.25 million lives lost in a single year,
it stands again as the deadliest infectious disease on Earth,
targeting lungs but capable of invading almost any organ, and hitting the poorest the hardest.
Yet this story is not fated to end in tragedy.
TB is both preventable and curable when diagnosis is timely and treatment is accessible.
The World Health Organization is pushing for new vaccines,
faster tests, and stronger frontline care,
but success depends on political courage and sustained funding.
If governments, researchers,
and communities act together—treating TB as urgently as any pandemic—the world can turn this quiet resurgence into a turning point instead of another forgotten catastrophe.