Abstract

Addressing social determinants of tuberculosis (TB) is essential to achieve elimination, including in low-incidence settings. We measured the association between socio-economic status and intermediate social determinants of health (SDHs, including drug misuse, tobacco smoking and alcohol), and TB, taking into account their clustering in individuals. We conducted a case-control study in 23–38 years old UK-born White adults with first tuberculosis episode, and randomly selected age and sex frequency-matched community controls. Data was collected on education, household overcrowding, tobacco smoking, alcohol and drugs use, and history of homelessness and prison. Analyses were done using logistic regression models, informed by a formal theoretical causal framework (Directed Acyclic Graph). 681 TB cases and 1183 controls were recruited. Tuberculosis odds were four times higher in subjects with education below GCSE O-levels, compared to higher education (OR = 3.94; 95%CI: 2.74, 5.67), after adjusting for other TB risk factors (age, sex, BCG-vaccination and stays ≥3 months in Africa/Asia). When simultaneously accounting for respective SDHs, higher tuberculosis risk was independently associated with tobacco smoking, drugs use (especially injectable drugs OR = 5.67; 95%CI: 2.68, 11.98), homelessness and area-level deprivation. Population Attributable Fraction estimates suggested that tobacco and class-A drug use were, respectively, responsible for 18% and 15% of TB cases in this group. Our findings suggest that socio-economic deprivation remains a driver of tuberculosis in England, including through drugs misuse, tobacco smoking, and homelessness. These findings further support the integration of health and social services in high-risk young adults to improve TB control efforts.

Highlights

  • Addressing social determinants of tuberculosis (TB) is essential to achieve elimination, including in low-incidence settings

  • We report on a case-control study investigating the associations between individual socio-economic status (SES) and a range of social determinants of health, and the risk of TB in UK-born young adults of White ethnic background

  • Complete data were available for 88% (1618/1864) of participants, with missing data mostly seen for alcohol drinking (3%), tobacco smoking (3%) and education level (3%)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Addressing social determinants of tuberculosis (TB) is essential to achieve elimination, including in low-incidence settings. Our findings suggest that socio-economic deprivation remains a driver of tuberculosis in England, including through drugs misuse, tobacco smoking, and homelessness These findings further support the integration of health and social services in high-risk young adults to improve TB control efforts. Over 20% of notified UK-born TB cases report at least one of homelessness, drug misuse, alcohol abuse, or history of prison stay, compared to 10% in foreign-born cases[10] Subjects with such social risk factors are younger (about 60% aged 15–44 years), more likely to be from White ethnic background, and present more commonly with pulmonary TB, the most communicable disease form[10]. We report on a case-control study investigating the associations between individual socio-economic status (SES) and a range of social determinants of health (including drug misuse, tobacco smoking, alcohol and homelessness), and the risk of TB in UK-born young adults of White ethnic background

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call