Objective: To assess tuberculin skin testing practices of physicians after
community-wide screening of 1400 children exposed to a pediatrician with ac
tive tuberculosis (TB),
Design: A self-administered questionnaire.
Setting: Medium-sized city in eastern Pennsylvania,
Participants: Pediatricians and family practitioners seeing pediatric patie
nts.
Main Percentages of physicians who followed published recommendations for p
lacement and Outcome reading of TB skin tests published by the American Aca
demy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Measures: Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC).
Results: Questionnaires were completed by 60/80 (75%) physicians. The 60 ph
ysicians had practiced a mean of 17 years (range 3-38 years), and only one
did not do TB skin testing for pediatric patients. The 59 physicians doing
TB skill testing reported routinely
Conclusion: tuberculin testing more than 900 children per month. Only 8/59
(14) physicians followed published guidelines for placement and reading of
tuberculin tests. Those physicians screened 158 (17%) of the pediatric pati
ents undergoing TB skin testing in a typical month. In this community where
a highly publicized TB case prompted massive pediatric screening, most phy
sicians seeing children in private practice do not follow standard TB skin
testing guidelines. Increased understanding of how private practice physici
ans learn about and decide to use recommended standards are needed if tuber
culin tests are to be correctly performed and TB appropriately diagnosed. (
C) 1999 American Journal of Preventive Medicine.