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1.
Arch Bronconeumol ; 39(10): 455-63, 2003 Oct.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14533995

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess tuberculosis control in the Central Health Region, Catalonia, Spain, from the implementation of the area's Tuberculosis Control Program in 1986 until the year 2000. METHOD: To study the epidemiological profile of tuberculosis and the outcome of the following control measures in sputum smear-positive patients: final outcome of treatment and monitoring, and the percentage of patients for whom a contact investigation (CI) was carried out. Tuberculosis control is considered effective if the sum of noncompliant patients, plus the cases in which treatment failed, plus the patients transferred out remains below 10% of the cohort of patients studied, and if a CI has been conducted in at least 80% of this cohort. RESULTS: The number of cases reported was 6326, of which 7% were retreatments. A total of 5865 new cases was detected. Of these, 5652 (96%) were patients born in Spain. The number of cases reported annually peaked in 1990 (474) and then declined continuously until 2000, when it was 54% lower (220). Foreign-born patients numbered 213 (4%), and 95% of them came from countries with a high prevalence of tuberculosis. In the cohort of patients studied between 1997 and 2000, the sum of noncompliant patients, plus cases in which treatment failed, plus the patients transferred out came to 11%. Since 1994, a CI has been carried out for over 80% of patients, and this figure reached 92% in 2000. CONCLUSIONS: We consider that a substantial degree of tuberculosis control has been achieved given the decline in tuberculosis morbidity among people born in Spain, the fact that the percentage of noncompliant patients, treatment failures and transfers was only slightly over 10%, and that a CI has been conducted for over 80% of patients since 1994 (92% in 2000).


Subject(s)
Tuberculosis/prevention & control , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/epidemiology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Child , Cohort Studies , Comorbidity , Contact Tracing/statistics & numerical data , Emigration and Immigration , Female , Humans , Incidence , Male , Middle Aged , National Health Programs/statistics & numerical data , Program Evaluation , Recurrence , Retrospective Studies , Spain/epidemiology , Treatment Refusal , Tuberculosis/epidemiology
3.
Gac Sanit ; 6(33): 257-62, 1992.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1291527

ABSTRACT

In order to assess what different health care workers (mainly physicians and nursing staff) know about the reporting of communicable diseases, with special emphasis on diseases that must be urgently reported, four groups were interviewed about this health information system (91 persons, who took part in different Public Health Seminars during the periods 1989-90 and 1990-91). The total mean score was 16.6 +/- 5.2, in a quantitative scale ranging from 0 to 27 points. Cholera was the communicable disease with the highest percentage of correct answers concerning the knowledge of its reporting (100% in two groups), while typhus was the disease with the lowest percentage (23%). The diversity of the results within the study groups suggests that it is necessary to insist on a continuous training on epidemiological surveillance and communicable diseases within Public Health activities in Catalonia.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Communicable Disease Control , Population Surveillance , Communicable Disease Control/statistics & numerical data , Female , Humans , Male , Nurses/statistics & numerical data , Physicians/statistics & numerical data , Spain , Surveys and Questionnaires
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