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1.
Lancet ; 338(8778): 1305-8, 1991.
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1264858

ABSTRACT

The value of programmes to control pulmonary tuberculosis in developing countries remains the subject of debate. We have examined the cost-effectiveness of chemotherapy programmes for the control of pulmonary sputum-smear-positive tuberculosis in Malawi; Mozambique; and Tanzania. Effective cure rates of 86-90 percent were achieved with short-course chemotherapy and of 60-66 percent with standard chemotherapy. The average incremental costs per year of life saved were US $1.7-2.1 for short-course chemotherapy with hospital admission; $2.4-3.4 for standard chemotherapy with hospital admission; $0.9-1.1 for ambulatory short-course chemotherapy; and $0.9-1.3 for ambulatory standard chemotherapy. Chemotherapy for smear-positive tuberculosis is thus cheaper than other cost-effective health interventions such as immunisation against measles and oral rehydration therapy. Because the greatest benefit of chemotherapy is reduced transmission of the bacillus; treating HIV-seropositive; tuberculosis smear-positive patients would be only slightly less cost-effective than treating HIV-seronegative; tuberculosis-smear-positive patients


Subject(s)
HIV , Ambulatory Care , Antitubercular Agents , Clinical Protocols , Sputum , Tuberculosis
2.
Pneumologie ; 44(1): 647-52, 1990.
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1268712

ABSTRACT

Tuberculosis is the most frequent infectious complication of AIDS and HIV infection in countries where che prevalence of tuberculous infection is high. HIV infection is the strongest risk factor for developing tuberculosis in individuals infected removly or recently with tubercle bacilli. An increased incidence of tuberculosis has been already documented in several African countries with a high prevalence of both tuberculous and HIV infections (Tanzania; Malawi). The increase in the incidence of tuberculosis is mainly due to the depression of cellular immunity caused by HIV infection in subjects infected with M. tuberculosis. The occurrence of tuberculosis in HIV-seropositive persons is more frequent in those remotely infected than in those recently infected or reinfected with M. tuberculosis. In developed countries; HIV infection will cause tuberculosis in only a relatively small number of persons; since the prevalence of tuberculosis infection is low in the age group up to approximately 45 years. HIV infection will; therefore; not substantially increase the number of tuberculosis cases


Subject(s)
HIV , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Developing Countries , Opportunistic Infections , Tuberculosis
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