F. Phelan et C. Teale, Tuberculosis in older people - is it on the increase? Trends in notifications in Leeds from 1976 to 1996, AGE AGEING, 29(4), 2000, pp. 319-323
Objectives: the absolute number of notifications for tuberculosis in older
people appears to have increased in Scotland, To determine if these trends
are present elsewhere in the UK, we have reviewed notifications in Leeds wi
th particular reference to non-pulmonary disease, Asian subcontinent groups
and older people.
Methods: we reviewed all notifications in Leeds (total population in 1991,
681 000; population aged greater than or equal to 65 years in 1991, 101 000
) during the 21 years 1976-96.
Results: total tuberculosis notifications for all age groups fell from 34 p
er 10(5) in 1976 to 11 per 10(5) in 1987 and then plateaued, The incidence
in those aged 65 years and over (about 34 per 10(5)) has not shown a large
change, but the number of notifications in this group as a percentage of al
l notifications increased from about 16% in 1977 (when this group constitut
ed 15% of the population) to 34% in 1989 (when this group constituted 16% o
f the population) and has remained at this level since. Numbers of cases of
non-respiratory tuberculosis and tuberculosis in the older Asian populatio
n remained low throughout the 21 years.
Conclusion: tuberculosis notification rates are much higher in older people
, but the absolute numbers do not appear to be increasing.