Abstract

The report of the Lancet Migration and Health Commission surmises that with a billion people on the move, this subject is one of the defining issues of our time [1]. Human population movement has been temporarily altered by the COVID-19 pandemic. Travel and migration will return, with some adaptation to a post-pandemic world. The higher risk of infectious diseases such as tuberculosis (TB) in migrants from high TB burden countries to high-income settings is widely recognised [2]. In some settings, such as in Western European nations and in Australia, TB in the foreign born can exceed three-quarters of cases.

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