1 / 20

Latent Tuberculosis among Displaced Populations Rapid Diagnosis and Control

Latent Tuberculosis among Displaced Populations Rapid Diagnosis and Control. Nikolaou Aristidis MD, MSc. Migration v s tb. Immigrants :. ↑ risks of transmission infectious diseases ( TB) i ) overcrowded camps ii) poor living conditions iii) poor access to healthcare provision

varuna
Download Presentation

Latent Tuberculosis among Displaced Populations Rapid Diagnosis and Control

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Latent Tuberculosis among Displaced PopulationsRapid Diagnosis and Control Nikolaou Aristidis MD, MSc

  2. Migration vstb

  3. Immigrants : • ↑risks of transmission infectious diseases (TB) i) overcrowded camps ii)poor living conditions iii) poor access to healthcare provision • At entry: 40 times more at risk active TB ≠local general population (Figuera-Munoz, 2008) (Rieder, 1994) (Arshad, 2010)

  4. TB incidence • Burden ↓in industrialized countries ≠high in developing • Immigrants carry LTBI →at increased risk of reactivation • EU: up to 82% foreign-born cases (among overall TB cases) • In low-incidence countries → % increasing since 1990s • ↑ risk among foreign-born even 20 yrs after migration (Dasgupta, 2000) (Klinkenberg, 2009)

  5. Factors influencing TB incidence • country of origin • age • sociodemographic factors • exposure and travel to country of origin • access to care • drug resistance • immune incompetence (Klinkenberg, 2009)

  6. Reactivation of prior TB infections • Recent TB infection or reinfection due to travel to the home country • Recent infection or reinfection within the new country (Klinkenberg, 2009)

  7. Special Health Needs/Obstacles • Language • Stigmatization • Poor cultural awareness • Psychological distress • Disruption of families and social networks • Economic difficulties • Difficult to trust doctors (Figuera-Munoz, 2008)

  8. Latent tb infection

  9. LTBI • Exposure to Mycobacterium tuberculosis→ Latent TB Infection • Usually, healthy life without developing active TB disease • 2 billion people LTBI ≠ <10 million a year active TB disease • 5 - 10% infected persons develop active TB disease 50%, within the first two years (CDC, 2010)

  10. LTBI • Usually,Skin Test (Mantoux) or Blood Test (Quantiferon) → TB infection • Normal chest x-ray and Negative sputum test • TB bacteria in body (alive but inactive) • Not feel sick – No symptoms • Cannot spread TB bacteria (CDC, 2010)

  11. screening

  12. Medical Screening • Objective →early preventive or curative intervention • Disease → relatively common and treatable • Test →i) inexpensive ii) easy to administer iii) cause no discomfort to the patient iv) high sensitivity and specificity (Dasgupta, 2005) (Rieder, 1994)

  13. TB screening • Targeted groups: • persons with a high risk of being infected by tuberculosis (curative treatment) • persons at high risk of developing tuberculosis (preventive intervention) • Screening tools : • chest radiography relatively high sensitivity • tuberculin skin-testing limited specificity • Tuberculin skin test =identification of these groups +indicator of need of radiographic examination (Rieder, 1994)

  14. Screening strategies • Pre-entry/ pre-migration screening • Port of arrival screening • Reception/ holding/ transit centre screening • Community post-arrival screening • Occasional screening • Follow-up screening (Klinkenberg, 2009)

  15. Active screening among foreigners → before dispersed in the country • Screening for tuberculosis (before or after arrival) →prevent unnecessary transmission (specifically designed centers) • Targeted screening of immigrants (country of origin) + surveillance for recently arrived populations (Figuera-Munoz, 2008)

  16. TB screening among EU • TB screening in 22/24 (96%) countries Compulsory basis in 12/22 (55%) countries • Only 4 systematically collecting data • The Nordic: to all new asylum seekers The Netherlands: on arrival (again 6, 12, 18, and 24 months) Austria, France, Spain, and Britain: induction or reception centers Italy and Germany: Regional variations in the provision Greece: immigrants who applied for a work permit (Norredam, 2005)

  17. Suggestions • Systematic recording and reporting of screening performance • Preventive strategy : • improving housing conditions (decrease the risk of tuberculosis transmission) • enhancing tuberculosis case finding • setting case management within Directly Observed Treatment program • Good follow-up system (Arshad, 2010) (Klinkenberg, 2009)

  18. Ideal long-term TB control strategy Global investment TB control in high-incidence countries → Global reduction in tuberculosis incidence → ↓ TB risk (migrants from high incidence to low incidence regions) More Humanitarian / More Cost-effective (Dasgupta, 2005)

  19. Equal Rights for health NOT entrance rejection orexpelling and repatriating • Active screening + access to healthcare facilities: • shorten the infectious periods • interfere with the transmission network • reduce risk of developing active TB • improve the control of potential tuberculosis reservoirs (Arshad, 2010) (Rieder, 1994)

  20. Thank you

More Related