Setting: Tiruvallur district In Tamil Nadu where DOTS was implemented by the State Government as the tuberculosis control measure in 1999, and monitored by the National Institute for Research in Tuberculosis for over five years.
Objective: To estimate trends in TB prevalence in a rural community with DOTS.
Design: Surveys of pulmonary tuberculosis were undertaken in representative samples of subjects aged > or =15 years (N = 83,000 - 92,000), initially and after two and half, five and seven and half years of implementation of DOTS.
We report here that the Directly Observed Treatment, Short course (DOTS) is reaching all tuberculosis patients in the community irrespective of social classification based on the analysis from the tuberculosis prevalence survey and programme performance during 1999-2003 from a rural area in Tamilnadu, South India. New smear- positive cases treated under a DOTS programme were classified in two groups namely; scheduled caste living in colony and other population. The prevalence of smear- positive cases among the scheduled caste population was 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report here that the Directly Observed Treatment, Short course (DOTS) is reaching all tuberculosis patients in the community irrespective of social classification based on the analysis from the tuberculosis prevalence survey and programme performance during 1999-2003 from a rural area in Tamilnadu, South India. New smear- positive cases treated under a DOTS programme were classified in two groups namely; scheduled caste living in colony and other population. The prevalence of smear- positive cases among the scheduled caste population was 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSetting: Tiruvallur District in Tamilnadu, South India, where the World Health Organization-recommended DOTS strategy was implemented as a tuberculosis (TB) control measure in 1999.
Objective: To assess the epidemiological impact of the DOTS strategy on the prevalence of pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB).
Design: Surveys of PTB were undertaken on representative population samples aged > or =15 years (n = 83000-90000), before and at 2.
Objective: To study the impact of improved treatment outcome of a cohort of patients treated under DOTS strategy on the prevalence of pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) in the community.
Design: The data from TB register of one Tuberculosis Unit (TU) in Tiruvallur district of Tamilnadu, and two TB disease surveys conducted in the same area during 1999-2003 were analysed. The successful treatment outcome was compared to the prevalence of TB in the subsequent cohort.