Abstract

A total of 1,271 persons living in a socially and economically depressed, inner-city area of Vancouver, British Columbia, voluntarily attended a tuberculosis case-finding campaign. Chest x-ray, on-the-spot specimen of sputum, and tuberculin skin test were offered at the time of the first attendance. All 3 diagnostic methods were found to be well accepted, with 93% of the participants having an x-ray, over 95% producing a sputum specimen, and almost 95% having a tuberculin test (a quarter of these did not, however, report for reading of the test). Eight cases of bacteriologically confirmed pulmonary tuberculosis were found: 6 suspected on x-ray (the remaining 2 films were abnormal but not diagnostic of tuberculosis), and 6 being positive on smear and/or culture of the initial on-the-spot sputum specimen. Examination of a second specimen of sputum diagnosed all of the 8 active cases identified by the survey. These results suggest that, in this particular setting, a chest radiogram taken by a transportable chest x-ray apparatus or examination of 2 sputum specimens might be equally successful at detecting all cases of active pulmonary tuberculosis within the time required for sputum culture. Examination of the sputum smear immediately identifies all the more infectious cases of pulmonary tuberculosis. The prevalence rate of 629 per 100,000 among those presenting themselves to this campaign illustrates the high-yield which might be achieved by active case-finding projects in known high-incidence segments of a generally low-incidence population.

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