Anti-tuberculous (Anti-TB) chemotherapy in Uganda is outlined. Its pattern of use and the subsequent shortcomings have prompted the need for the present review. A collateral comparison to that of Hong Kong was run to emphasize the correlation of anti-TB chemotherapy with economic development and regional variation in the population of the two areas. Tuberculosis of the central nervous system (CNS) has a high fatality rate. In the search for a more comprehensive anti-TB dosage regimen, the difficulty in treating tuberculosis of the CNS has attracted special attention with emphasis on the fate of anti-TB drugs across the meninges. The choice of a method for drug analysis in routine therapeutic drug monitoring for a country is likewise determined by factors similar to those for the anti-TB regimen. Uganda needs an inexpensive, precise and selective method for TB treatment tailored to its financial and manpower resources.