Abstract

BackgroundHealth care workers are at high risk for tuberculosis (TB). China, a high burden TB country, has no policy on medical surveillance for TB among healthcare workers. In this paper, we evaluate whether China’s national TB diagnostic guidelines could be used as a framework to screen healthcare workers for pulmonary TB disease in a clinical setting in China.MethodsBetween April–August 2010, healthcare workers from 28 facilities in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, China were eligible for TB screening, comprised of symptom check, chest X-ray and tuberculin skin testing. Healthcare workers were categorized as having presumptive, confirmed, or clinically-diagnosed pulmonary TB, using Chinese national guidelines.ResultsAll healthcare workers (N=4347) were eligible for TB screening, of which 4285 (99%) participated in at least one TB screening test. Of the healthcare workers screened, 2% had cough for ≥ 14 days, 3% had a chest X-ray consistent with TB, and 10% had a tuberculin skin test induration ≥ 20 mm. Of these, 124 healthcare workers were identified with presumptive TB (i.e., cough for ≥ 14 days in the past 4 weeks or x-ray consistent with TB). Twelve healthcare workers met the case definition for clinically-diagnosed pulmonary TB, but none were diagnosed with TB during the study period.ConclusionA substantial proportion of healthcare workers in Inner Mongolia had signs, symptoms, or test results suggestive of TB disease that could have been identified using national TB diagnostic guidelines as a screening framework. However, achieving medical surveillance in China will require a framework that increases the ease, accuracy, and acceptance of TB screening in the medical community. Routine screening with improved diagnostics should be considered to detect tuberculosis disease among healthcare workers and reduce transmission in health care settings in China.

Highlights

  • Health care workers are at high risk for tuberculosis (TB)

  • A confirmed pulmonary TB case was defined as a person with sputum smear positive acid-fast bacilli (AFB) results; a clinically-diagnosed TB case was defined as a person with a chest X-ray consistent with TB and either a cough for more than 14 days in the past 4 weeks or a tuberculin skin test reading ≥20 mm [10, 11]

  • Conclusions the burden of TB in China has declined substantially since 1990, the country continues to bear a large portion of the world’s incident TB cases, with healthcare workers being at high risk for TB

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Summary

Introduction

Health care workers are at high risk for tuberculosis (TB). China, a high burden TB country, has no policy on medical surveillance for TB among healthcare workers. We evaluate whether China’s national TB diagnostic guidelines could be used as a framework to screen healthcare workers for pulmonary TB disease in a clinical setting in China. China’s national TB diagnostic guidelines can serve as a framework for routine screening of HCWs for TB disease [10, 11], but the application of the diagnostic guidelines in this context has not been evaluated. To address this gap, we evaluated using China’s national TB diagnostic guidelines to screen HCWs for pulmonary TB disease in a clinical setting in Inner Mongolia. In 2010, the notification rate of active TB in China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region was 74.1 per 100,000 and the notification rate for smear positive TB was 35.4 per 100,000 [12]

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