Tuberculosis in Havana City, 1995-1999

Authors

  • José I Sevy Court Centro Provincial de Higiene y Epidemiología de la Ciudad de La Habana; Grupo Provincial de Tuberculosis; Departamento de Epidemiología
  • Otto Peláez Sánchez Centro Provincial de Higiene y Epidemiología de la Ciudad de La Habana; Grupo Provincial de Tuberculosis; Departamento de Epidemiología
  • Ana L Arteaga Yero Centro Provincial de Higiene y Epidemiología de la Ciudad de La Habana; Grupo Provincial de Tuberculosis; Departamento de Epidemiología
  • Luisa Armas Pérez Instituto 'Pedro Kourí'; Grupo de Vigilancia e Investigaciones de TB e IRA
  • Susana Borroto Gutiérrez Instituto 'Pedro Kourí'; Grupo de Vigilancia e Investigaciones de TB e IRA
  • C Edilberto González Ochoa Instituto 'Pedro Kourí'; Grupo de Vigilancia e Investigaciones de TB e IRA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1590/S0034-89102003000300010

Keywords:

Tuberculosis, Surveillance, Control program, Cuba

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Tuberculosis is a worldwide health problem getting a prioritized attention by the Cuban National Health System. To describe the main indicators of the Cuban Tuberculosis Control Program. METHODS: Based on surveillance data from the Provincial Center of Hygiene and Epidemiology, the health care network and strategies of the tuberculosis control program were reviewed; incidence rates, case finding indicators, diagnosis and case management were described. RESULTS: Eight subjects with respiratory symptoms were found per 1,000 attending general medical care services. The incidence rates of all tuberculosis types declined from 16.4 in 1995 to 12.0 x 10(5) people in 1999. Pulmonary tuberculosis incidence rate was reduced from 15.1 in1995 to 10.4 x 10(5) in 1999, whereas extrapulmonary tuberculosis had an increment from 1.3 to 1.6 x 10(5) in the same period. Of all new cases, 40-50 % were diagnosed at multispecialty clinics, 67.6% were diagnosed by positive smears, 15.2 % by positive cultures, 13.8 % by clinical and X-rays evidences only; and 0.9 % and 1.5 % were respectively diagnosed by biopsy and necropsy. There was an increase in the incidence rate in the age group 15-64 years in 1996 and 1997 but it declined again in 1998 and 1999. The age group 64 years and over showed a rate reduction from 1995 to 1999. In general, incidence rates diminished in the overall period. The average delay between onset of symptoms and diagnosis improved from 42 days in 1995 to 28.6 days in 1999. CONCLUSIONS: There seems to be a halt in reporting trends of new cases in 1996. Tuberculosis indicators reveal satisfactory changes in the study period.

Downloads

Published

2003-06-01

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Sevy Court, J. I., Peláez Sánchez, O., Arteaga Yero, A. L., Armas Pérez, L., Borroto Gutiérrez, S., & González Ochoa, C. E. (2003). Tuberculosis in Havana City, 1995-1999 . Revista De Saúde Pública, 37(3), 326-332. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0034-89102003000300010