Title 22 › Chapter CHAPTER 32— - FOREIGN ASSISTANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT › Part Part I— - Declaration of Policy; Development Assistance Authorizations › § 2151b–3
The United States must make controlling tuberculosis a main goal of its foreign aid. The President must create a comprehensive 5-year U.S. strategy to expand and improve efforts to fight TB. The plan must aim to cut TB illness and deaths in half from the 1990 level, keep detecting at least 70% of the most infectious TB cases and successfully treat at least 85% of those detected where USAID works, treat 4,500,000 new sputum-smear TB patients by 2013, and diagnose and treat 90,000 new multi-drug resistant TB cases by 2013. The President may provide foreign assistance for TB prevention, treatment, control, and elimination, and must coordinate with the World Health Organization, the Global Fund, and other partners. Priority support is for direct services such as expanding DOTS, rapid testing, care for people with both TB and HIV, treatment for MDR-TB, stronger health systems, use of international care standards, patient empowerment, and research. The law also directs funding to global efforts like the Global Tuberculosis Drug Facility, the Stop TB Partnership, and the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development, and lets USAID increase resources to WHO and the Stop TB Partnership to help high-burden countries address MDR- and XDR-TB. Each year the President must report to Congress on the impact of U.S. TB aid. The report must include numbers of cases diagnosed and cured, activities funded and how they raise diagnosis and treatment, the share of funds for direct services, TB research and trials supported, numbers starting MDR-TB treatment, coordination with partners, workforce limits, number trained, and a spending breakdown. Definitions: DOTS — the WHO-recommended TB treatment approach; DOTS-Plus — DOTS plus extra steps for MDR-TB; Global Alliance for TB Drug Development — a public-private group to make new TB drugs available and affordable; Global Tuberculosis Drug Facility — a program to improve access to quality TB medicines; Stop TB Strategy — WHO’s multi-part plan to cut TB illness and deaths; Stop Tuberculosis Partnership — the group of agencies, countries, and donors working to control TB.
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Foreign Relations and Intercourse — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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22 U.S.C. § 2151b–3
Title 22 — Foreign Relations and Intercourse
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73