EPIDEMIOLOGY <<Back
 
 
040
INCIDENCE OF PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS AND CHANGE IN BACTERIOLOGICAL STATUS OF CASES AT SHORTER INTERVALS
GD Gothi, AK Chakraborty, K Parthasarathy & VV Krishnamurthy: Indian J Med Res 1978, 68, 564-74.

The incidence rates of sputum positive pulmonary tuberculosis (cases) from the five year follow ups of a rural population done by National Tuberculosis Institute were reported on the basis of studies at intervals of one and a half to two years. Information on fate of cases was also likewise reported. These parameters appear to be imprecise since incidence and fate of cases at shorter intervals were not taken into account. Thus, the information on incidence of pulmonary tuberculosis in India is meager as compared to that on prevalence of disease. Therefore, a study mainly to find out the incidence and fate of cases at shorter intervals of 3-6 months was undertaken in 87 randomly selected villages of Nelamangala sub-division, Bangalore district which was one of the 3 sub-divisions where repeated epidemiological surveys had been conducted between 1961-68. The sample of villages in the present investigation was other than that included in the earlier report. Organized Case-finding, anti-tuberculosis treatment and BCG vaccination neither existed nor could be provided in the area till the completion of the study. The present study was conducted between 1968-1972.

This study conducted among 30,576 persons has shown that incidence of cases over a period of three months was 0.99 per thousand and was not much different from the annual rate of 1.03 per thousand reported on the basis of repeated surveys at longer intervals. That the three months rates were not a quarter of the annual rates meant that the procedure of calculating incidence rates on the basis of surveys done at varying intervals after adjusting for the interval had to be used with great caution. The study of fate of cases showed that cases converted or reverted even at shorter intervals and this appeared to be going on continually in the community. However, incidence of cases and cure and death from among the existing as well as the fresh cases kept on balancing each other so that the prevalence rates of cases studied at shorter or at longer intervals did not show variations.

KEY WORDS: INCIDENCE, FATE, CASE, RURAL POPULATION, SURVEY, SHORTER INTERVALS
 
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