Impact of Wars and Disasters on Tuberculosis Epidemiology
Tuberculosis (TB) remains one of the major public health problems globally. Key risk factors for TB include poverty, living conditions such as overcrowding, and the presence and prevalence of significant biological and behavioral risk factors that impair the immune system or contribute to additional...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Clinical Practice & Research 2024-09, Vol.46 (5), p.411-420 |
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description | Tuberculosis (TB) remains one of the major public health problems globally. Key risk factors for TB include poverty, living conditions such as overcrowding, and the presence and prevalence of significant biological and behavioral risk factors that impair the immune system or contribute to additional biological risk factors. Wars and disasters increase the risk of developing TB mainly due to population movement and displacement into overcrowded camps and temporary shelters, destruction of infrastructure, breakdown of health services, or discontinuation of ongoing treatment for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infection. This leads to a higher risk of TB transmission, reactivation of latent TB infection, worsening of active disease, and increased vulnerabilities. Any factor that increases risk factors for TB is a primary driver of changes in TB epidemiology during wars and disasters. A TB preparedness plan should include a coordination mechanism, pre-assessment of data such as TB prevalence and incidence, drug-resistance status, prevailing major biological and behavioral risk factors for TB, resource requirements, a contingency plan for procurement and supply chain, surveillance, monitoring and evaluation tools, health facility details, effective TB infection control measures, and testing and screening protocols. Strategies to ensure the continuity of the National TB Control Program and to decrease vulnerabilities and risk factors for TB should be developed. Since most wars and disasters cause refugees to cross borders and affect multiple countries, developing an international data-sharing system would be useful. Keywords: Disasters, epidemiology, public health, tuberculosis, wars. |
doi_str_mv | 10.14744/cpr.2024.39082 |
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Key risk factors for TB include poverty, living conditions such as overcrowding, and the presence and prevalence of significant biological and behavioral risk factors that impair the immune system or contribute to additional biological risk factors. Wars and disasters increase the risk of developing TB mainly due to population movement and displacement into overcrowded camps and temporary shelters, destruction of infrastructure, breakdown of health services, or discontinuation of ongoing treatment for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infection. This leads to a higher risk of TB transmission, reactivation of latent TB infection, worsening of active disease, and increased vulnerabilities. Any factor that increases risk factors for TB is a primary driver of changes in TB epidemiology during wars and disasters. A TB preparedness plan should include a coordination mechanism, pre-assessment of data such as TB prevalence and incidence, drug-resistance status, prevailing major biological and behavioral risk factors for TB, resource requirements, a contingency plan for procurement and supply chain, surveillance, monitoring and evaluation tools, health facility details, effective TB infection control measures, and testing and screening protocols. Strategies to ensure the continuity of the National TB Control Program and to decrease vulnerabilities and risk factors for TB should be developed. Since most wars and disasters cause refugees to cross borders and affect multiple countries, developing an international data-sharing system would be useful. 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Key risk factors for TB include poverty, living conditions such as overcrowding, and the presence and prevalence of significant biological and behavioral risk factors that impair the immune system or contribute to additional biological risk factors. Wars and disasters increase the risk of developing TB mainly due to population movement and displacement into overcrowded camps and temporary shelters, destruction of infrastructure, breakdown of health services, or discontinuation of ongoing treatment for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infection. This leads to a higher risk of TB transmission, reactivation of latent TB infection, worsening of active disease, and increased vulnerabilities. Any factor that increases risk factors for TB is a primary driver of changes in TB epidemiology during wars and disasters. A TB preparedness plan should include a coordination mechanism, pre-assessment of data such as TB prevalence and incidence, drug-resistance status, prevailing major biological and behavioral risk factors for TB, resource requirements, a contingency plan for procurement and supply chain, surveillance, monitoring and evaluation tools, health facility details, effective TB infection control measures, and testing and screening protocols. Strategies to ensure the continuity of the National TB Control Program and to decrease vulnerabilities and risk factors for TB should be developed. Since most wars and disasters cause refugees to cross borders and affect multiple countries, developing an international data-sharing system would be useful. Keywords: Disasters, epidemiology, public health, tuberculosis, wars.</description><subject>Disasters</subject><subject>Distribution</subject><subject>Environmental aspects</subject><subject>Epidemiology</subject><subject>Health aspects</subject><subject>Social aspects</subject><subject>Tuberculosis</subject><subject>Turkey</subject><subject>War</subject><issn>2980-2156</issn><issn>2980-2156</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2024</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><recordid>eNpNkE9LAzEQxYMoWGrPXvcL7DZ_N8mx1KqFgpeKx5DOJiWy3SzJeui3N209yBxm5sGbN_wQeia4IVxyvoQxNRRT3jCNFb1DM6oVrikR7f2_-REtcv7GGFPNhdBqhvT2NFqYquirL5tyZYeuegnZ5smVLQ7V_ufgEvz0MYdcbcbQuVOIfTyen9CDt312i78-R5-vm_36vd59vG3Xq10NlLGplo5rKT2AAg4lGHOPiWBMM9kdBAemO6lAtQ6Y8AeHW9kW1bVS2E4y69kcNbe7R9s7EwYfp2Sh1OUTiIPzoegrRQTnnEheDMubAVLMOTlvxhRONp0NweZKyxRa5kLLXGmxX0YaXI4</recordid><startdate>20240901</startdate><enddate>20240901</enddate><creator>Topluoglu, Seher</creator><general>KARE Publishing</general><scope>AAYXX</scope><scope>CITATION</scope><scope>IAO</scope></search><sort><creationdate>20240901</creationdate><title>Impact of Wars and Disasters on Tuberculosis Epidemiology</title><author>Topluoglu, Seher</author></sort><facets><frbrtype>5</frbrtype><frbrgroupid>cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c233t-7e4977fcc8c4c00204f01533937db54c39d78c86ec35fbe067654ce675ad73af3</frbrgroupid><rsrctype>articles</rsrctype><prefilter>articles</prefilter><language>eng</language><creationdate>2024</creationdate><topic>Disasters</topic><topic>Distribution</topic><topic>Environmental aspects</topic><topic>Epidemiology</topic><topic>Health aspects</topic><topic>Social aspects</topic><topic>Tuberculosis</topic><topic>Turkey</topic><topic>War</topic><toplevel>peer_reviewed</toplevel><toplevel>online_resources</toplevel><creatorcontrib>Topluoglu, Seher</creatorcontrib><collection>CrossRef</collection><collection>Gale Academic OneFile</collection><jtitle>Journal of Clinical Practice & Research</jtitle></facets><delivery><delcategory>Remote Search Resource</delcategory><fulltext>fulltext</fulltext></delivery><addata><au>Topluoglu, Seher</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Impact of Wars and Disasters on Tuberculosis Epidemiology</atitle><jtitle>Journal of Clinical Practice & Research</jtitle><date>2024-09-01</date><risdate>2024</risdate><volume>46</volume><issue>5</issue><spage>411</spage><epage>420</epage><pages>411-420</pages><issn>2980-2156</issn><eissn>2980-2156</eissn><abstract>Tuberculosis (TB) remains one of the major public health problems globally. Key risk factors for TB include poverty, living conditions such as overcrowding, and the presence and prevalence of significant biological and behavioral risk factors that impair the immune system or contribute to additional biological risk factors. Wars and disasters increase the risk of developing TB mainly due to population movement and displacement into overcrowded camps and temporary shelters, destruction of infrastructure, breakdown of health services, or discontinuation of ongoing treatment for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-infection. This leads to a higher risk of TB transmission, reactivation of latent TB infection, worsening of active disease, and increased vulnerabilities. Any factor that increases risk factors for TB is a primary driver of changes in TB epidemiology during wars and disasters. A TB preparedness plan should include a coordination mechanism, pre-assessment of data such as TB prevalence and incidence, drug-resistance status, prevailing major biological and behavioral risk factors for TB, resource requirements, a contingency plan for procurement and supply chain, surveillance, monitoring and evaluation tools, health facility details, effective TB infection control measures, and testing and screening protocols. Strategies to ensure the continuity of the National TB Control Program and to decrease vulnerabilities and risk factors for TB should be developed. Since most wars and disasters cause refugees to cross borders and affect multiple countries, developing an international data-sharing system would be useful. Keywords: Disasters, epidemiology, public health, tuberculosis, wars.</abstract><pub>KARE Publishing</pub><doi>10.14744/cpr.2024.39082</doi><tpages>10</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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source | ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition); DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; ProQuest Central UK/Ireland; Alma/SFX Local Collection; ProQuest Central |
subjects | Disasters Distribution Environmental aspects Epidemiology Health aspects Social aspects Tuberculosis Turkey War |
title | Impact of Wars and Disasters on Tuberculosis Epidemiology |
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