Practical and affordable measures for the protection of health care workers from tuberculosis in low-income countries.
- 1 January 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 75 (5), 477-89
Abstract
With the global upsurge in tuberculosis (TB), fueled by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) pandemic, and the increase in multidrug-resistant TB, the condition has become a serious occupational hazard for health care workers worldwide. Much of the current understanding about nosocomial TB transmission stems from the USA; however, little is known about the risk of such transmission in low-income countries. The focus of this review is on sub-Saharan Africa, since this is the region with the highest TB incidence, the highest HIV incidence, the worst epidemic of HIV-related TB, and where the risk to health care workers is probably greatest. Measures used in industralized countries to control nosocomial TB transmission (ventilation systems, isolation rooms, personal protective equipment) are beyond the resources of low-income countries. Protecting health care workers in these settings involves practical measures relating to diagnosis and treatment of infectious cases; appropriate environmental control; and relevant personal protection and surveillance of health care workers. Research needs to be carried out to examine the feasibility and cost-effectiveness of measures such as voluntary HIV-testing of health care workers (to enable known HIV-positive health care workers to avoid high-risk settings) and isoniazid preventive therapy for workers in high-risk settings. More resources are also needed to ensure full implementation of currently recommended measures to decrease the risk of nosocomial and laboratory-acquired TB.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- An epidemiological study of tuberculosis and HIV infection in Tanzania, 1991–1993AIDS, 1996
- Tuberculosis among Health Care WorkersNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- Bed occupancy due to HIV/AIDS in an urban hospital medical ward in UgandaAIDS, 1994
- Transmission of Tuberculosis in New York City -- An Analysis by DNA Fingerprinting and Conventional Epidemiologic MethodsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- The Epidemiology of Tuberculosis in San Francisco -- A Population-Based Study Using Conventional and Molecular MethodsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- The safety of Bacille Calmette—Guérin vaccination in HIV infection and AIDSAIDS, 1993
- HIV infection and primary resistance to antituberculosis drugs in Abidjan, Côte dʼIvoireAIDS, 1992
- An Outbreak of Tuberculosis with Accelerated Progression among Persons Infected with the Human Immunodeficiency VirusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992
- Drug-resistant tuberculosis in Sierra LeoneTubercle, 1986
- Contamination of specimen container surfaces during sputum collection.Journal of Clinical Pathology, 1983