A study published on the July 22 issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association called for more aggressive action against
tuberculosis, after it had discovered an increase in the number of foreigners
in the
Although TB cases in the US dropped 45 percent between 1996
and 2006 (from more than 25,000 to less than 14,000), according to the US
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s statistics, there was a five
percent increase in TB cases among immigrant populations living in the US
during the same period, Dr. Kevin P. Cain head of the CDC’s Division of
Tuberculosis Elimination and lead author of the study said.
According to the study, 57 percent of all reported TB cases
in the
For the study, Dr. Cain studied data from the US National TB
Surveillance System, which registered 46,970 cases among foreign-born persons
in the
Moreover, TB cases were four times higher among foreign-born
immigrants than among US-born people even for those who had been living in the
Rates of TB varied substantially by country and region of
origin. For example, individuals born in countries of sub-Saharan Africa had
annual case rates of greater than 250 per 100,000 persons during the first two
years after entering the
Dr. Cain said it is impossible to test the 37 million
foreign-born individuals currently living in the
“We believe that this is helpful
because, while it might not be possible to test and treat all foreign-persons
for latent TB, if programs can try to focus on the highest risk groups and can
reach out to the populations that need this testing and treatment the most,
then they'll have a greater chance of preventing as many cases as possible for
the number of tests that they are able to do,” he said.
Dr. Cain said that screening
immigrants and refugees from the
In order to prevent TB cases, Dr. Cain suggested that
immigrants should receive overseas diagnosis and treatment prior to
immigration, especially those coming from the countries with the highest rate
of infection. Another way to curb TB rates would be to find and treat latent TB
infections. In these cases, germs are present but the body is able to fight off
symptoms. The infection becomes active and able to spread once the immune system
begins to weaken as we get old or in case of a serious disease.
However, he added that “as long as TB is out of control
globally, as it is, this will be a problem in the