Government Aims to Eliminate Tuberculosis in Canada’s North by 2030

Government Aims to Eliminate Tuberculosis in Canada’s North by 2030
Children skip stones in Arctic Bay, Nunavut, in this file photo. Although tuberculosis is almost unheard of in the south, it is present in many northern reserves and in 17 out of 25 Nunavut communities. (The Canadian Press/Adrian Wyld)
The Canadian Press
3/23/2018
Updated:
3/23/2018

OTTAWA—The government is promising to cut in half the rate of active tuberculosis in Canada’s North within the next seven years, ahead of its plan to eliminate the disease by 2030.

The eradication plan will be lead by Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, the representative body of Inuit in Canada, and will focus firstly on preventing deaths related to tuberculosis among children.

ITK President Natan Obed says the prevalence of tuberculosis in Inuit Nunangat, which is the Inuit-preferred term for the Arctic, is a legacy of the government’s historic indifference to Inuit health and well-being.

Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott says the rate of tuberculosis among Inuit has grown by more than 150 percent over the past decade.

Philpott says it should never have taken Canada so long to make this pledge.

Tuberculosis is a preventable and curable bacterial infection that can lead to death and is more than 300 times more common among Inuit people than other Canadians.

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