A/RES/73/3
Political declaration of the high-level meeting of the General Assembly
on the fight against tuberculosis
support for those who become disabled due to tuberculosis, integrated within health
systems towards achieving universal health coverage and removing barriers to care;
to address the economic and social determinants of the disease; and to promote and
support an end to stigma and all forms of discrimination, including by removing
discriminatory laws, policies and programmes against people with tuberculosis, and
through the protection and promotion of human rights and dignity, as well as policies
and practices which improve outreach, education and care;
38. Commit to providing special attention to the poor, those who are
vulnerable, including infants, young children and adolescents, as well as elderly
people and communities especially at risk of and affected by tuberculosis, in
accordance with the principle of social inclusion, especially through ensuring strong
and meaningful engagement of civil society and affected communities in the planni ng,
implementation, monitoring and evaluation of the tuberculosis response, within and
beyond the health sector; we further acknowledge the link between incarceration and
tuberculosis and therefore reaffirm the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for
the Treatment of Prisoners (the Nelson Mandela Rules) as defined in General
Assembly resolution 70/175 of 17 December 2015;
39. Commit to enable and pursue multisectoral collaboration at the global,
regional, national and local levels, across health and nutrition, finance, labour, social
protection, education, science and technology, justice, agriculture, the environment,
housing, trade, development and other sectors, in order to ensure that all relevant
stakeholders pursue actions to end tuberculosis and leave no one behind;
40. Strengthen support and capacity-building in low-income countries and
lower-middle-income countries, many of which have high rates of tuberculosis
combined with health and social protection systems that have limited resources,
including to support implementing multisectoral approaches in their response to the
tuberculosis epidemic;
41. Commit to foster cooperation between public and private sector entities in
furthering the development of newly approved medicines for multidrug -resistant and
extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis and for additional new drugs in the future, as
part of Member States’ efforts to contribute appropriately to research and
development;
42. Commit to advancing research for basic science, public health research
and the development of innovative products and approaches, which may include
evidence-based, regulated medicines, including traditional medicines as adjuvant
therapies, including in cooperation with the private sector and academia, without
which ending the tuberculosis epidemic will be impossible, including towards
delivering, as soon as possible, new, safe, effective, equitable, affordable, available
vaccines, point-of-care and child-friendly diagnostics, drug susceptibility tests and
safer and more effective drugs and shorter treatment regimens for adults, adolescents
and children for all forms of tuberculosis and infection, as well as innovation to
strengthen health systems such as information and communication tools and delivery
systems for new and existing technologies, to enable integrated people -centred
prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care of tuberculosis;
43. Commit to create an environment conducive to research and development
of new tools for tuberculosis, and to enable timely and effective innovation and
affordable and available access to existing and new tools and delivery strategies and
promote their proper use, by promoting competition and collaboration, removing
barriers to innovation, and working towards improving regulatory processes and
capabilities;
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