As in the earlier BCG trial against tuberculosis conducted in Chingleput district in south India (in 1969), the entire study population was tuberculin tested (Survey I), a study was undertaken subsequently to see whether in this population there was any change in the tuberculosis situation in terms of prevalence of infection in children. For this purpose, in two of the panchayat unions, in a random sample of panchayats, tuberculin testing was repeated twice at an interval of 10 yr (Survey II) and 15 yr (Survey III) after the initial testing in children aged 1-9 yr. High coverages were obtained for tuberculin testing and reading.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relationship of non-specific sensitivity to post-vaccination tuberculin sensitivity has been the subject of controversy. This relationship has an important bearing on the common practice of using post-vaccination tuberculin sensitivity for assessing BCG vaccination in areas with a high prevalence of non-specific sensitivity. If post-vaccination tuberculin sensitivity is found to be dependent on the amount of already existing, naturally acquired, non-specific sensitivity it could not be considered a reliable measure of the success of BCG vaccination.
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