Tuesday, January 6, 2026

‘Tuberculosis out of control:’ cases have soared 140% this year

Tuberculosis (TB) cases have more than doubled this year, triggering an urgent call from an academic for the government to carry out an information campaign to stop the disease spreading.

Data from the federal Secretariat of Health shows there were 40,244 reported cases of TB to the week ending November 23, a 140% increase compared to the 16,700 cases reported in all of 2018.

With 5,172 cases, Guerrero has been the worst affected state followed by Hidalgo, Veracruz, México state and Sinaloa.

Mario Luis Fuentes, a National Autonomous University professor and author of a paper entitled Warning: Tuberculosis is out of Control, said the national increase goes beyond “all expectations” and has put researchers on alert.

He said the forced displacement of people (a problem that is particularly prevalent in Guerrero) and a weakening of prevention strategies were among the factors that may have contributed to this year’s abnormally high outbreak.

“The statistical data speaks of an interruption in the positive trend that we were seeing and which today is broken,” Fuentes said.

TB is “a disease of poverty,” the academic said. “Behind it there is overcrowding [in homes], malnutrition and a life of marginalization. The figure we have [this year] hasn’t been seen for at least two decades . . .”

Fuentes said the government should urgently provide information to the public in order to combat and stop the expansion of the disease, which is spread through the air when an infected person coughs, sneezes or spits.

“It has to be dealt with urgently. More than 2,200 people died last year, a figure that, for me, is excessive . . . They are deaths that shouldn’t happen . . .”

Source: Milenio (sp) 

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
older people hanging out

Mexico’s population will soon enter a new era of accelerated aging 

1
Soon after 2030, Mexicans over 60 will outnumber those under 15, initiating an aging population structure that will affect the country's economy, healthcare and social security systems.
U.S. military on a tank near the U.S.-Mexico border

Opinion: Trump’s Venezuela gamble and lessons from America’s expansionist past

3
As U.S. President Trump renews threats to deploy the military to Mexico, historian Dr. Joel Zapata reminds readers of the human and social casualties caused by American expansionism.
Rally in Toluca for Sheinbaum

Sheinbaum ends first full year with 69% approval; social programs shine, security plan struggles

0
Sheinbaum's approval rating, though very good for a sitting president, is down a full 16 percentage points from her sky-high 85% rating in February 2025, with persistent cartel crime being the most evident factor.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity