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Journal of Public Health Medicine 24:49-52 (2002)
© 2002 Faculty of Public Health Medicine of the Royal Colleges of Physicians of the United Kingdom

Management of tuberculosis in a British inner-city population


Veronica L. C. White
Mehjabeen Paliwalla
Claire J. Steves
Deepa Jadhav
John Moore-Gillon

Department of Respiratory Medicine, Bart's and The London Trust, London EC1A 7BE. vlcw{at}btinternet.com

Background The aim of the study was to investigate the management of patients with tuberculosis (TB) in terms of their utilization of health service resources.

Methods An analysis of patient records was carried out in an NHS Trust in East London, United Kingdom, serving a socio-economically deprived population. The subjects were all residents of Tower Hamlets treated for drug-sensitive TB in the in-patient and out-patient departments of the Trust in 1998.

Results Of the 62 patients with TB studied, 38 (61 per cent) had an in-patient stay at some stage of their management. Twenty-six of these 38 were admitted acutely ill via the Accident and Emergency Department, 16 having self-presented and 10 after urgent referral by their general practitioner. Only four of the total 62 patients were admitted with previously diagnosed disease, and all four had significant complications necessitating admission. Eight patients were admitted electively for investigation, typically being brief admissions for surgical biopsy. Median in-patient stay was 14 days (range 1–144 days), and in six cases we identified potentially remediable delays in diagnosis and initiation of therapy.

Conclusions UK and US guidelines for TB imply out-patient management as the norm. Our study shows a very high rate of in-patient care, largely a consequence of the emergency admission of acutely ill, previously undiagnosed cases. There are public health implications in terms of spread of infection from individuals with advanced disease. The high utilization of expensive in-patient resources has significant implications for purchasers and providers of care for TB in socio-economically deprived areas. Further, the cost-effectiveness of public health interventions aimed at limiting the spread of TB should be assessed by reference to this true, high cost of managing TB, not a low cost based on false assumptions about rates of out-patient versus in-patient care.

Keywords: tuberculosis, in-patient stay, out-patient management, cost implications


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