24 Mar 2015 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Tuberculosis has plagued mankind since the time of the ancient Egyptian civilization. This seemingly innocuous micro-organism, mycobacterium tuberculosis, one of mankind’s most vicious enemies, has survived for millennia; flourishing at times of war, famine and natural disasters; going underground when living conditions and nutrition improve. No country or person is immune from the disease-widespread illegal and legal migration, wars, famines, refugees, the AIDS epidemic and unprecedented air travel have made sure of that. The disease has killed George Orwell, Franz Kafka, Anton Chekov, Simon Bolivar, John Keats and Frederic Chopin. London has become the tuberculosis capital of Western Europe, and cases of Multi- Drug Resistant Tuberculosis (MDRTB) in the United Kingdom have doubled during the previous decade.
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