Tuberculosis: What You Need to Know
This information sheet offers a concise overview of tuberculosis (TB), detailing its transmission, symptoms, and treatment.
This information sheet offers a concise overview of tuberculosis (TB), detailing its transmission, symptoms, and treatment.
This video addresses the ongoing challenge of tuberculosis (TB) in Alaska, which has the highest TB rate in the United States. It emphasizes that TB can affect anyone and underscores the importance of awareness, testing, and treatment to help end TB in the state.
This fact sheet provides a detailed comparison of tuberculosis (TB) treatment regimens, encompassing both drug-sensitive and drug-resistant TB.
This report provides an early analysis of cases of tuberculosis (TB) disease reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) during 2024 as compared with previous years. CDC used U.S. Census Bureau population estimates to calculate rates (cases per 100,000 persons) of TB disease.
This fact sheet provides basic information on the transmission, symptoms, testing, and treatment of TB.
This report outlines the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases' (NIAID) updated strategic plan to combat tuberculosis. It focuses on four key priorities: enhancing fundamental knowledge of TB, advancing diagnostic research, accelerating vaccine development, and supporting strategies to treat and prevent TB.
This webpage provides an overview of hepatitis B, including its causes, symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment options. It emphasizes the importance of vaccination in preventing the spread of hepatitis B and reducing the risk of liver cancer and other serious health complications.
This infographic provides an overview of hepatitis B, detailing its transmission, symptoms, and prevention strategies.
This video promotes the hepatitis B birth dose as a critical first step in protecting newborns from lifelong infection and liver cancer. It emphasizes that most people with hepatitis B are unknowingly infected at birth and that early vaccination is safe, effective, and the world’s first anti-cancer vaccine.
This fact sheet presents key talking points emphasizing the critical importance of administering the hepatitis B vaccine birth dose to newborns.