Tuberculosis case detection rate (%, all forms) - Country Ranking - Oceania

Definition: Tuberculosis case detection rate (all forms) is the number of new and relapse tuberculosis cases notified to WHO in a given year, divided by WHO's estimate of the number of incident tuberculosis cases for the same year, expressed as a percentage. Estimates for all years are recalculated as new information becomes available and techniques are refined, so they may differ from those published previously.

Source: World Health Organization, Global Tuberculosis Report.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Samoa 110.00 2020
2 New Caledonia 87.00 2019
2 Nauru 87.00 2020
2 New Zealand 87.00 2020
2 Palau 87.00 2020
2 Australia 87.00 2020
7 Tuvalu 86.00 2020
8 Kiribati 76.00 2020
8 Tonga 76.00 2020
10 Fiji 73.00 2020
11 Papua New Guinea 72.00 2020
12 Solomon Islands 71.00 2020
12 Vanuatu 71.00 2020

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Original Source Notes: Estimates are presented with uncertainty intervals (see footnote). When ranges are presented, the lower and higher numbers correspond to the 2.5th and 97.5th centiles of the outcome distributions (generally produced by simulations). For more detailed info

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Tuberculosis is one of the main causes of adult deaths from a single infectious agent in developing countries. This indicator shows the tuberculosis detection rate for all detection methods. Editions before 2010 included the tuberculosis detection rates by DOTS, the internationally recommended strategy for tuberculosis control. Thus data on the case detection rate from 2010 onward cannot be compared with data in previous editions.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual