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Pulmonary. Tuberculosis. Tuberculosis. Tuberculosis ranks as the third leading cause of disease and disability among adults in the world, and nearly one-third of the world's population is infected with the tuberculosis bacillus.
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Pulmonary Tuberculosis
Tuberculosis • Tuberculosis ranks as the third leading cause of disease and disability among adults in the world, and nearly one-third of the world's population is infected with the tuberculosis bacillus. • Of these cases, more than 9 million people become sick with TB when their immune system is weakened and 1.76 million die each year.
Symptoms • coughing, • tiredness, • loss of appetite • and weight loss. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05pbSjkfIyE • later fever and coughing up blood may occur..
Causes • Caused by one of two species of rod-shaped bacteria; • Mycobacterium tuberculosis or Mycobacterium bovis. • Estimated that up to 30% of the world’s population has one of these bacteria in their body.
Transmission • Spread through droplets released by coughs, sneezes, laughing or even talking. • M. tuberculosis is very resistant and can survive for several weeks once the droplets have dried. • TB can be spread from cows to humans as M.bovis infects cattle and can be passed on in milk.
Who is most “at risk” ? • Those living or working together for longer periods, especially in over crowded and poorly ventilated rooms. • Those working or living in long term care facilities like hospitals, prisons and old people’s homes. • Those from countries where TB is common. • Those with reduced immune systems.
Course of Infection First….. • 1. The bacteria grow and divide within the upper region of the lungs where there is plenty of oxygen. • 2. The body’s immune system responds and white blood cells accumulate at the infection site to ingest the bacteria.
Then…….. • 3. This leads to inflammation and enlargement of lymph notes that drain the lungs – primary infection (usually in children). • 4. In a healthy person there are few symptoms and recovery occurs within a few weeks. • But some bacteria usually remain………
Years later….. • 5. Many years later these bacteria re-emerge to cause a second TB infection. This is post-primary tuberculosis and occurs usually in adults. • 6. This also occurs in the upper lungs but this time destroys lung tissue, lung cavities and scar tissue. • 7. It is difficult to control and the sufferer coughs up blood and lung tissue. It can then spread to the rest of the body and becomes fatal.
Case Study: China • In China, tuberculosis is the leading cause of death from infectious disease among adults. • Every year, 1.4 million people develop active TB. • In 1990, 360,000 people in China died from the disease.
Intervention programme • In 1991, China revitalized its ineffective tuberculosis program. • The program adopted the WHO-recommended TB control strategy, DOTS, through which trained health workers watched patients take their treatment at local TB county dispensaries. • Why do you think this was done?
Impact • China achieved a 95 percent cure rate for new cases within two years of adopting DOTS. • The number of people with TB declined by over 37 percent in project areas between 1990 and 2000, and 30,000 TB deaths have been prevented each year. • More than 1.5 million patients have been treated, leading to the elimination of 836,000 cases of pulmonary TB.
Cost and cost effectiveness • The program cost $130 million in total. The World Bank and the WHO estimated that successful treatment was achieved at less than $100 per person. • One healthy life was saved for an estimated $15 to $20. • The World Bank ranks DOTS as one of the most cost-effective of all health interventions.