SETTING: Republic of Botswana.
OBJECTIVES: To describe and analyse the epidemiology of adult lung disease
in Botswana and provide information about risk factors.
DESIGN: Register-based retrospective study.
RESULTS: Poverty and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection arc major
risk factors for lung disease. In 1997, TB caused 15.7%, pneumonia 8.3%, a
sthma/COPD 0.7% and lung cancer 0.4% of adult in-patient deaths, while 15.5
% of deaths were classified as AIDS. Respiratory conditions accounted for 1
4.2% of hospital admissions and 18.1% of out-patient consultations. Pneumoc
oniosis was under-reported. Classification problems exist between AIDS, TB
and pneumonia. The case fatality rate for in-patients with pneumonia was 5.
6% in 1990 vs. 15.5% in 1997, and for TB patients it was 7.4% in 1990 vs. 1
1.2% in 1997. Morbidity rates also increased for pneumonia and TB through t
he 1990s. There was a steeper rise in pneumonia mortality and morbidity rat
es in females than males. The gender distribution in TB incidence remained
unchanged, but the average age of female TB patients decreased by 7.7 years
from 1983 to 1998, vs. a decrease of 5.3 years in mates.
CONCLUSIONS: Pulmonary TB and pneumonia are major causes of adult mortality
and morbidity in Botswana. Incidences and case fatality rates are increasi
ng, due to co-existent HIV infection. Non-communicable lung diseases are le
ss common causes of death, and prevalences seem to be stable.