Government pledges to eliminate tuberculosis in the North by 2030
OTTAWA — By 2030, tuberculosis will be a thing of the past in Canada’s North, the federal government promised Friday — part of a Liberal plan to battle a disease whose disproportionate impact among Inuit can be traced to a colonial history of forced relocations and a decades-long housing crisis.
The government is also laying out an interim goal of reducing active tuberculosis in the North by half within the next seven years.
The eradication plan is to be led by Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, which represents the 65,000 Inuit living in Canada, and will focus firstly on preventing deaths related to tuberculosis among children.
The prevalence of tuberculosis in Inuit Nunangat — ITK’s preferred term for traditional Inuit territory — is a legacy of the government’s historic indifference to Inuit health and well-being, said president Natan Obed.


