Abstract

Although sub-Saharan Africa has the highest rates of tuberculosis (TB) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in the world, the rates of TB amongst its health care workers (HCWs) are poorly documented. We therefore conducted a country-wide investigation. All district/government and mission hospitals in Malawi that diagnose and care for TB patients were visited in order to obtain information on hospital-based HCWs and their incidence of TB in 1996. Hospital TB case loads, country-wide TB notification numbers and national population estimates for 1996 were obtained, which enabled TB case notification rates to be calculated. In 1996, 108 (3·6%) of 3042 HCWs from 40 hospitals were registered and treated for TB: 22 with smear-positive pulmonary TB (PTB), 40 with smear-negative PTB and 46 with extrapulmonary TB. The overall case fatality rate was 24%. Compared with the adult general population aged ⩾15 years, the relative risk [95% confidence interval (CI)] in HCWs of all types of TB was 11·9 [9·8–14·4], of smear-positive PTB 5·9 [3·9-9·0], of smear-negative PTB 13·0 [9·5–17·7] and of extrapulmonary TB 18·4 [13·8–24·6], P < 0·05. The 1996 hospital TB case load ranged from 29 to 915: there were no cases of TB in HCWs in hospitals whose case load was ⩽100 patients, while the TB case rate among HCWs was similar in hospitals with annual case loads of 101–300 or >300. The annual risk of TB was high among all categories of HCW, especially clinical officers. This study shows a high rate of TB in HCWs in Malawi, and emphasizes the need for practical and affordable control measures for the protection of HCWs from TB in low-income countries.

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