2023 UNHLM TB Briefing for Academics & Healthcare Workers

10th March 2023 | 8AM EST | 1PM GMT | 4PM EAT | 6.30PM IST

 

Join us to learn more about this important process and how academics and healthcare workers can engage! 

Register here:  https://forms.gle/EKUaZLATcRkyEMbi9 

The 2023 UN High Level Meeting on TB (UNHLM TB) will create the framework for future policy reforms and investments required to end TB. The success of the meeting relies on robust engagement with national decision makers in the run up to the event. 

In 2018, at the last UNHLM TB, we learned how academics and healthcare workers can play a crucial role in making the meeting a success. With an even busier international agenda, early engagement and coordination will be key.

Join us to learn more about the process, to hear from those who engaged in 2018, and to discuss academic and healthcare worker priorities for 2023.

 

REGISTRATION REQUIRED

 To register, visit: https://forms.gle/EKUaZLATcRkyEMbi9 

 

This session is being organised by UK Academics and Professionals to End TB and Campaigns in Global Health.  

Thank you once again for taking the time to support our joint letter to the UN General Assembly, calling for the involvement of academics and healthcare workers in the forthcoming UN High-Level Meeting on TB.

We are delighted to have secured support from over 400 colleagues from around the world. The letter has now been sent to the President of the UN General Assembly and the two Co-Facilitators of the meeting and can be read below.

We will keep you informed about the letter’s impact, and to let you know about any further advocacy opportunities. If you have any questions, ideas, or suggestions for collaboration, we would love to hear from you.

Your Excellencies,

Ahead of next year’s High-Level Comprehensive Review of Progress by Heads of State on the fight against tuberculosis (TB), we are writing to urge you to ensure that the voice of healthcare workers and researchers is included throughout the process.

Prior to the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, TB was the single biggest infectious disease killer on the planet. The UN High-Level Meeting on the fight against TB in 2018 marked a significant step in the global effort to scale up the programmes, research and investment needed to deliver on the Sustainable Development Goal of ending TB by 2030. The COVID-19 pandemic has knocked out decades of progress, with millions of people missing out on life saving diagnosis and treatment, and many more falling ill as a result.

As healthcare staff working on the frontline, we have a unique perspective on the barriers and systemic issues which prevent people from accessing life-saving treatment and care. As researchers, we are at the cutting edge of the scientific effort to better understand the TB pandemic and to create the new tools and approaches needed for equitable access to TB prevention and care to end TB once and for all.

Alongside survivors, affected communities and civil society, we can make a vital contribution to deliberations in the run up to and during the High-Level Comprehensive Review next year. We are committed to leveraging our expertise and experience to ensure the meeting is a success, working in- country and cooperating internationally to ensure that the commitments made by Member States set us on the path to ending TB.

To do this, we believe it is essential that the High-Level Comprehensive Review take place during the UN General Assembly high-level week in September. While we appreciate that there are many competing interests during this busy time, it is critical to ensure the prioritisation of a disease that continues to affect millions of people each year and to enable appropriate alignment with the High-Level Meetings on Universal Health Coverage and Pandemic Preparedness and Response.

Frontline voices are critical to the success of the High-Level Comprehensive Review. We therefore request that you seek to include healthcare workers and scientists within the negotiations, including in multi-stakeholder consultations, plenary sessions and panels, as well as by encouraging member states to include healthcare workers and researchers within their delegations.

We are committed to working alongside survivors, affected communities, civil society and with our national governments to ensure a successful UN High-Level Comprehensive Review. We wish you every success in your preparations for the meeting.

Sincerely,

Dr Jessica Potter

Co-Chair, UK Academics and Professionals to End TB Consultant Respiratory Physician, North Middlesex University Hospital NHS Trust

Dr Kerry Millington

Co-Chair, UK Academics and Professionals to End TB Research Uptake Manager, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine

Alongside over 400 colleagues from around the world.*

Website: https://ukaptb.org/ Twitter: @UKAPTB Email: ukaptb@gmail.com

* The full list of signatories was included in the copy of the letter sent to the President of the UN General Assembly and the Co-Facilitators of the 2023 UN High-Level Meeting on TB but is not being published online for confidentiality. If you would like further information about the final list of signatories, please contact ukaptb@gmail.org or janika@cghproject.org.

H.E. Csaba Kőrösi, President of the 77th session of the United Nations General Assembly H.E. Krzysztof Szczerski, Permanent Representative of Poland to the United Nations
H.E. Bakhtiyor Ibragimov, Permanent Representative of Uzbekistan to the United Nations

Tuesday, 13 December 2022

🎉🎉OVER 400 SIGNATURES 🎉🎉

Thank you to everyone who signed and shared our campaign to get healthcare workers and researchers a voice at UNHLM TB 2023!

We couldn't advocate without you and every signature is greatly appreciated in the fight to #EndTB

Watch this space for updates to the progress on this campaign

***Campaign Closed for Signatures***

We need your help

Letter to UN General Assembly

Researchers & Healthcare Workers at UNHLM TB 2023

The UK Academics and Professionals to End TB Network is coordinating an international sign-on letter to the President of the UN General Assembly and the two Co-Facilitators of the forthcoming UN High-Level Meeting on tuberculosis (TB).

The letter calls for the inclusion of researchers and healthcare workers during the meeting, alongside affected communities, civil society and other key stakeholders. It also reiterates the call, issued by the Stop TB Partnership, for the High-Level Meeting to take place in 'Leaders Week' when the most Heads of State attend the General Assembly.The full letter can be accessed
here. If you would like to support this letter but are not an academic or healthcare worker, your signature will be included in a separate "support from other partners and stakeholders" section to show wider support for the inclusion of the academic and professional voice.