Yes! We Can End TB!

TB is no longer hidden in silence. Today, we understand how it spreads, what to watch for, and how to act early.

World Tuberculosis Day • March 24

There was a time when tuberculosis felt like a shadow that followed a person.

Not just the illness—but the silence around it.

People avoided saying it out loud. Families kept it private. Some thought it was something shameful. Even being near someone with TB made others step back. It was not only a health issue. It became a social one.

That was before.

The shift began when TB became something we could understand, test, and treat. Clinics opened. Information spread. The fear slowly lost its grip.

Today, TB is still serious—but it is no longer something we face blindly.

It is also clearer now how TB spreads.

TB mainly spreads through the air when a person with untreated active TB coughs, sneezes, or talks for a long time in a closed space. The risk comes from breathing the same air, especially with close and prolonged contact.

This is different from diseases like chickenpox, which spread more easily and can pass quickly even with shorter exposure. TB does not work that way.

That is why the main concern is close and prolonged exposure, not ordinary contact.

And people now know what to look for.

A cough that does not go away for two weeks or more. Chest pain. Fever that keeps coming back. Night sweats. Weight loss. Feeling tired all the time.

These are signals.

And the next step is simple: get tested.

Testing for TB is available in many public health centers, often for free. If detected early, TB can be treated with proper medication. But treatment must be completed. Stopping halfway makes it harder to cure and easier to spread.

Avoiding TB is also practical.

Cover your mouth when coughing. Keep spaces well-ventilated. Avoid close, prolonged contact with untreated TB cases. Take care of your health—rest, food, and strength still matter.

These are small actions, but they carry weight.

What changed is not just medicine, but how we see the disease. TB is no longer something we hide—it is something we respond to, not with fear but with action.

And that is where the line becomes real:

Yes. We can end TB.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Voices Across the Field • Darem Placer

Climate Change: The Bad News and the Good News

Climate change is no longer distant. It now shapes health, daily life, and even global power.

For those who’d rather listen.

2026 Reality Check

Climate change used to be about nature.

Now it is about people, systems, and power.

It affects not just weather, but health, behavior, economies, and even politics between countries.

The Bad News

The impact is deeper than expected.

1. It is now reshaping global politics

Climate change is starting to redraw the political map of the world.

• Countries are competing for food, land, and resources 
• Access to fertile land can influence conflict and tension 
• Previously frozen or unused regions are becoming new areas of interest 

Example: 
As land becomes usable in colder regions, countries may start to compete more for access to these newly usable areas.

At the same time, highly productive regions are becoming more valuable because of their role in global food supply.

Climate change is quietly turning into a resource race.

And it doesn’t stop at borders.

2. It is now affecting human health directly

Disease is no longer separate from climate.

• Heat and rainfall patterns are driving outbreaks like dengue 
• Conditions that spread disease are becoming more common 
• Some diseases are expanding into new regions 

The environment is now influencing who gets sick, and where.

3. Weather is breaking its own rules

Seasons are losing structure.

• Heat arrives earlier than expected 
• Rain comes in the wrong amounts and timing 
• Familiar patterns no longer apply 

The calendar is no longer reliable.

4. Disasters are grouping together

Extreme events are no longer isolated.

• One system can trigger multiple disasters 
• Tornadoes, floods, and storms can happen together 
• More “outbreak days” instead of single incidents 

It is no longer one problem at a time.

5. Daily life is being quietly altered

Heat affects behavior.

• People move less when it is too hot 
• This increases long-term risks like heart disease and diabetes 
• Small changes build up over time 

Climate change is not just outside. It is shaping daily habits.

6. Nature is struggling to keep pace

Ecosystems are under pressure.

• Some are adapting more slowly 
• Recovery after damage is harder 
• Systems are becoming less stable 

The balance is weakening.

The Good News

There is still movement forward.

1. We now understand the problem better than before

Climate change is no longer abstract.

We can now clearly link it to:

• disease 
• weather patterns 
• human behavior 
• political tension 

Clarity is progress.

2. Solutions already exist, but they are not yet used fast enough

• Renewable energy is growing 
• Scientific innovation is improving 
• Natural solutions are being studied 

The tools are already here, but the pace needs to match the problem.

3. Global awareness is stronger, but action is uneven

Countries are treating climate as:

• a security issue 
• a policy priority 
• a long-term challenge 

It is no longer ignored, but progress is not consistent.

4. Some systems are still holding on

Not everything is collapsing.

There are still:

• stable ecosystems 
• recoverable environments 
• opportunities to act before damage becomes harder to reverse 

There is still time to respond.

The Real Picture

Climate change is no longer just environmental.

It is:

• physical (heat, storms, disease) 
• behavioral (how we live) 
• economic (food, resources) 
• political (land, power, conflict) 

Simple Takeaway

The bad news? 
Climate change is already affecting how we live.

The good news? 
We can see it clearly now.

And when something becomes clear, 
it becomes harder to ignore.

⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ

Sky-Low • Darem Placer