SETTING: Two closed camps in Hong Kong for Victnamese refugees.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the referral times by clinicians (doctor's delay) o
f cases of tuberculosis (TB) from refugee camp clinics to the hospital/ches
t clinic.
DESIGN: Retrospective case-note study of 97 Vietnamese patients receiving t
reatment for tuberculosis.
RESULTS: The sites of TB were pulmonary (n = 61), glandular (n = 15), pleur
al effusion (n = 15), and other (n = 6). The median referral time was 18 da
ys (range 0-417). Median consultations numbered three (range 1-16). Fifty-t
hree (54.6%) patients were prescribed antibiotics. Thirty-nine (40%) patien
ts were referred within 10 days; of these, 18 were referred the same day. T
hese 39 patients were less likely to have received antibiotics (9/33 [23.1%
] vs 44/58 [75.9%], relative risk [RR] 0.3 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.1
7-0.55), bur were equally likely to have been physically examined (RR 0.66,
95% Cl 0.39-1.1). Sixteen (16.5%) patients were referred after 90 days. Th
ey attended the clinic more often (median attendances 6.5 vs 3, P = 0.0002)
, and were prescribed more antibiotic courses (mean antibiotic prescription
s 1.6 vs 0.7, P = 0.03).
CONCLUSION: Referral times by these clinicians varied widely, with long del
ays for approximately 60% of patients. Guidelines pertinent to primary care
clinicians are needed to heighten their awareness of tuberculosis to preve
nt referral delays and subsequent TR treatment.