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Tuberculosis: London's TB Rate Jumped 50 Percent In The Last Decade

MARIA CHENG   12/16/10 07:01 PM ET   AP

Tuberculosis London

LONDON — The number of people infected with tuberculosis has jumped by 50 percent in London in the last decade, making it the tuberculosis capital of Western Europe, a new report says.

Unlike other countries in the region where tuberculosis is dropping, the disease is on the rise in Britain, particularly in London. In 1999, there were about 2,309 cases.

By 2009, London had 3,450 cases of Britain's more than 9,000 cases, according to an article published Friday in the medical journal, Lancet. Since only about 70 percent of active tuberculosis cases are picked up, those numbers are an underestimate.

"We are concerned to see cases of TB at their highest levels since the 1970s," said Dr. Ibrahim Abubakar, head of tuberculosis surveillance at Britain's Health Protection Agency, in a statement. He was not connected to the commentary. "The key to reducing levels of TB is early diagnosis and appropriate treatment," Abubakar said.

While tuberculosis remains rare in the U.K. – about 15 people per 100,000 people are infected – that is still higher than elsewhere in Western Europe. In France, an estimated 10 people per 100,000 have tuberculosis.

Once known as the "white plague" in England because of the loss of skin color in patients, tuberculosis was virtually wiped out after the introduction of drugs and vaccinations in the 1960s. But it has surged in recent years, including drug-resistant strains.

Most tuberculosis cases in Britain are in people born overseas, although not in recent arrivals. About 85 percent of people with tuberculosis have been in Britain for at least two years, meaning the disease is not being imported, but circulating locally.

"The rise in tuberculosis cases has nothing to do with migration and immigrants," said Alimuddin Zumla of University College London, author of the commentary. "This is a fallacy that needs to be corrected," he said, noting the same risks that plagued Victorian England – like poor housing, bad ventilation and overcrowding – are to blame for Britain's current outbreak.

Though tuberculosis mainly affects groups like drug users, refugees, and people with HIV, its prevalence in prisons is problematic. The spread of tuberculosis in prisons has occasionally infected staff and then spilled over into the general population.

Britain is one of the world's biggest foreign aid donors, with considerable investments in projects fighting tuberculosis in poor countries.

"We need to clean up our own back garden first," Zumla said, calling for new strategies and more money to reverse the British epidemic. "Charity begins at home."

___

Online:

http://www.lancet.com

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LONDON — The number of people infected with tuberculosis has jumped by 50 percent in London in the last decade, making it the tuberculosis capital of Western Europe, a new report says. Unlike o...
LONDON — The number of people infected with tuberculosis has jumped by 50 percent in London in the last decade, making it the tuberculosis capital of Western Europe, a new report says. Unlike o...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ron Broxted
03:33 PM on 02/11/2011
Having lived in the slums of Britain I can assure American readers it is distinctly third world. As with Cuba under Batista or 'Nam under Thieu it is a bad bet.
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Daniel Wilkes
07:47 AM on 12/31/2010
The worst thing about this is that the powers that be have stopped offering the BCG vaccine to the whole population as it is no longer considered "cost effective". It is now only offered to people who are in "at risk" groups. If it's offered at all. I can see the argument, as apparently we were having to vaccinate 100000 people to see 1 case prevented, but as far as I'm concerned this increase can be blamed at least in part on that decision. TB is such a horrible disease that it is worth trying to eradicate? A blanket vaccination policy will always reach far more of the "at risk" than a targeted one and that's where we should return, to the days where the BCG was given in schools en masse, not in the GP surgeries- where some people never go- on the whim of the GP in question.
schatsie
Wall Street is Worse than Vegas
01:44 PM on 12/19/2010
The real questions are how drug resistant are these TB infections? If they are drug resistant, then you can pick them up from your friendly waiter at the restaurant.....
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Kevin Atlanta
Active Citizen 54
07:24 PM on 12/17/2010
It's not shocking with the overall decline in the standard of living in all the industrial powers because of the rise of Corporate Fascism and the Police State.
In America the coming wave will be exponential as homeless shelters become more crowded, Jails, Corporate Prisons and Medical facilities become ever more crowded and the inability of people to obtain health care from the economics of having the Middle Class raped and pillaged.
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BlackYowe
I am a classical- liberal woman and a Jeweler.
07:10 PM on 12/17/2010
Wow now this shocks me.