Disparities in tuberculosis burden among South Asians living in New York City, 2001-2010.

Natalie Stennis, Lisa Trieu, Bianca Perri, Janelle Anderson, Muhammad Mushtaq, Shama Ahuja
Author Information
  1. Natalie Stennis: At the time of the study, all of the authors were with the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Bureau of Tuberculosis Control, New York, NY.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We have described the characteristics of South Asian-born tuberculosis (TB) patients living in New York City (NYC) and compared them with other foreign-born patients to explore possible explanations for the disproportionate burden of TB in the South Asian population.
METHODS: We used data on demographic and clinical characteristics for TB patients identified by the NYC Bureau of Tuberculosis Control from 2001 to 2010 to compare South Asian patients with other Asian and other foreign-born patients. We reviewed genotyping and cluster investigation data for South Asian patients to assess the extent of genotype clustering and the possibility of local transmission in this population.
RESULTS: The observed disparity in TB rates and burden among South Asians was not explained by social or clinical characteristics. A large amount of TB strain diversity was observed among South Asians, and they were less likely than other foreign-born patients to be infected with the same TB strain as another NYC patient.
CONCLUSIONS: The majority of South Asians were likely infected with TB abroad. South Asians represent a meaningful foreign-born subpopulation for targeted detection and treatment of TB infection in NYC.

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Grants

  1. U38 HM000414/NCHM CDC HHS
  2. 5U38HM000414/NCHM CDC HHS

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Asian People
Child
Child, Preschool
Emigration and Immigration
Female
Genotype
Humans
Infant
Male
Middle Aged
New York City
Socioeconomic Factors
Tuberculosis
Young Adult

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0SouthTBpatientsAsiansNYCforeign-bornAsiancharacteristicsburdenamongtuberculosislivingNewYorkCitypopulationdataclinicalobservedstrainlikelyinfectedOBJECTIVES:describedAsian-borncomparedexplorepossibleexplanationsdisproportionateMETHODS:useddemographicidentifiedBureauTuberculosisControl20012010comparereviewedgenotypingclusterinvestigationassessextentgenotypeclusteringpossibilitylocaltransmissionRESULTS:disparityratesexplainedsociallargeamountdiversitylessanotherpatientCONCLUSIONS:majorityabroadrepresentmeaningfulsubpopulationtargeteddetectiontreatmentinfectionDisparities2001-2010

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