Transmission of tuberculosis in a jail

Citation
Tf. Jones et al., Transmission of tuberculosis in a jail, ANN INT MED, 131(8), 1999, pp. 557
Citations number
31
Categorie Soggetti
General & Internal Medicine","Medical Research General Topics
Journal title
ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
ISSN journal
00034819 → ACNP
Volume
131
Issue
8
Year of publication
1999
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-4819(19991019)131:8<557:TOTIAJ>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
Background: Outbreaks of tuberculosis are uncommonly recognized in jails. I n 1996, an increase in active tuberculosis cases was noted among inmates of a large urban jail. Objectives: To determine the source and extent of a tuberculosis outbreak i n an urban jail and to recommend control measures. Design: Retrospective cohort study. Setting: Urban jail. Patients: Inmates and guards with tuberculosis. Intervention: Outbreak evaluation and control. Measurements: Medical records of inmates and guards with tuberculosis were reviewed, and inmates were interviewed. DNA fingerprinting was performed on Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates. Results: From 1 January 1995 through 31 December 1997, active tuberculosis was diagnosed in 38 inmates and 5 guards from the jail. Nineteen (79%) of t he 24 culture-positive inmates had isolates with DNA fingerprints matching those of other inmates. Isolates from both culture-positive guards matched the predominant inmate strain; only 6 (14%) of 43 isolates from infected pe rsons in the community had this pattern. The median length of incarceration of all inmates in the jail was 1 day; the median length of continuous inca rceration before diagnosis of tuberculosis in inmates was 138 days. Inmates with tuberculosis had been incarcerated a median of 15 times. Forty-three percent of persons in this city with tuberculosis diagnosed from January 19 95 through July 1997 had been incarcerated in the jail at some time before diagnosis. Conclusions: Traditional and molecular epidemiologic investigations suggest that tuberculosis was transmitted among inmates and guards in an urban jai l. Aggressive measures to screen for active tuberculosis upon incarceration are important for preventing spread of disease in jails and to the surroun ding community.