February 16, 2011

The Big Chill

Canadian TB control gets a belting from the Canadian Medical Association Journal; in a recent press release TB Control was described as A Century Of Failure.
"The ensuing mistrust of physicians and public health, combined with the stigma of tuberculosis, may still be hampering control efforts,"
The press release has attracted all sorts of media attention - invariably the wrong sort of media if you are part of TB Control - public trust in officials has been lost
the editorial says that shouldn't stop governments from doing what they can to alleviate the problem. It calls for more emphasis on early diagnosis, testing and screening as well as for education programs to rebuild public trust.


Tuberculosis In Nunavut: A Century Of Failure

15 Feb 2011  

A recent outbreak of tuberculosis in Nunavut, with a population infection rate 62 times the Canadian average, points to a need to rebuild trust in public health to combat the disease, states an editorial published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).

Nunavut is Canada's third territory in the eastern Arctic, created in 1999. Its population is about 30,000 people, and almost 80% are Inuit, spread over an area of more than 2 million square kilometers.

At least 100 new active cases of tuberculosis were reported in 2010 involving adolescents and young adults as well as older people

Public health measures are in place in the territory with screening programs for school children and people in high-risk facilities such as homeless shelters and prisons but screening for the rest of the population is much less consistent and under resourced. The historical legacy of previous approaches to tuberculosis in which people were sent south, often without consent or notice to families, may be a barrier for control efforts.

"The ensuing mistrust of physicians and public health, combined with the stigma of tuberculosis, may still be hampering control efforts," write Drs. Noni MacDonald, Paul Hébert and Matthew Stanbrook.

The isolation and wide geographic distribution of communities in Nunavut, high rates of poverty and smoking and overcrowded housing with poor ventilation are other factors affecting the ability to control tuberculosis.

"Eradication of tuberculosis will require not only the implementation of immediate coordinated public health measures, but also long-term economic investments and growth to tackle poverty and poor housing," state the authors.

They conclude "this is not just Nunavut's problem - it is Canada's problem. It's long past time that the people of Nunavut were freed from the "white plague."

Source:
Kim Barnhardt
Canadian Medical Association Journal
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/216475.php