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Endemic tuberculosis, the homeless, and public transportation: A merging of geographical information systems surveillance and the Houston Tuberculosis Initiative Surveillance project.

机译:地方性结核病,无家可归者和公共交通:地理信息系统监视与休斯顿结核病倡议监视项目的合并。

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摘要

To reach the goals established by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) and the Centers for Disease Control's (CDC) STOP TB USA, measures must be taken to curtail a future peak in Tuberculosis (TB) incidence and speed the currently stagnant rate of TB elimination. Both efforts will require, at minimum, the consideration and understanding of the third dimension of TB transmission: the location-based spread of an airborne pathogen among persons known and unknown to each other. This consideration will require an elucidation of the areas within the U.S. that have endemic TB. The Houston Tuberculosis Initiative (HTI) was a population-based active surveillance of confirmed Houston/Harris County TB cases from 1995--2004. Strengths in this dataset include the molecular characterization of laboratory confirmed cases, the collection of geographic locations (including home addresses) frequented by cases, and the HTI time period that parallels a decline in TB incidence in the United States (U.S.). The HTI dataset was used in this secondary data analysis to implement a GIS analysis of TB cases, the locations frequented by cases, and their association with risk factors associated with TB transmission.;This study reports, for the first time, the incidence of TB among the homeless in Houston, Texas. The homeless are an at-risk population for TB disease, yet they are also a population whose TB incidence has been unknown and unreported due to their non-enumeration. The first section of this dissertation identifies local areas in Houston with endemic TB disease. Many Houston TB cases who reported living in these endemic areas also share the TB risk factor of current or recent homelessness. Merging the 2004--2005 Houston enumeration of the homeless with historical HTI surveillance data of TB cases in Houston enabled this first-time report of TB risk among the homeless in Houston. The homeless were more likely to be US-born, belong to a genotypic cluster, and belong to a cluster of a larger size. The calculated average incidence among homeless persons was 411/100,000, compared to 9.5/100,000 among housed. These alarming rates are not driven by a co-infection but by social determinants. The unsheltered persons were hospitalized more days and required more follow-up time by staff than those who reported a steady housing situation. The homeless are a specific example of the increased targeting of prevention dollars that could occur if TB rates were reported for specific areas with known health disparities rather than as a generalized rate normalized over a diverse population.;It has been estimated that 27% of Houstonians use public transportation. The city layout allows bus routes to run like veins connecting even the most diverse of populations within the metropolitan area. Secondary data analysis of frequent bus use (defined as riding a route weekly) among TB cases was assessed for its relationship with known TB risk factors. The spatial distribution of genotypic clusters associated with bus use was assessed, along with the reported routes and epidemiologic-links among cases belonging to the identified clusters.;TB cases who reported frequent bus use were more likely to have demographic and social risk factors associated with poverty, immune suppression and health disparities. An equal proportion of bus riders and non-bus riders were cultured for Mycobacterium tuberculosis, yet 75% of bus riders were genotypically clustered, indicating recent transmission, compared to 56% of non-bus riders (OR=2.4, 95%CI(2.0, 2.8), p<0.001). Bus riders had a mean cluster size of 50.14 vs. 28.9 (p<0.001). Second order spatial analysis of clustered fingerprint 2 (n=122), a Beijing family cluster, revealed geographic clustering among cases based on their report of bus use. Univariate and multivariate analysis of routes reported by cases belonging to these clusters found that 10 of the 14 clusters were associated with use. Individual Metro routes, including one route servicing the local hospitals, were found to be risk factors for belonging to a cluster shown to be endemic in Houston. The routes themselves geographically connect the census tracts previously identified as having endemic TB. 78% (15/23) of Houston Metro routes investigated had one or more print groups reporting frequent use for every HTI study year. We present data on three specific but clonally related print groups and show that bus-use is clustered in time by route and is the only known link between cases in one of the three prints: print 22. (Abstract shortened by UMI.).
机译:为了达到医学研究所(IOM)和美国疾病控制中心(CDC)的STOP TB确立的目标,必须采取措施减少结核病(TB)发病率的未来高峰,并加快目前停滞的结核病消除速度。两项工作至少都需要考虑和理解结核病传播的第三个方面:在彼此认识和未知的人之间,空气传播病原体的位置传播。考虑到这一点,将需要阐明美国境内结核病流行的地区。休斯敦结核病倡议(HTI)是一项基于人群的主动监测,对1995--2004年期间确诊的休斯顿/哈里斯县结核病病例进行了监测。该数据集的优势包括实验室确诊病例的分子特征,病例常有的地理位置(包括家庭住址)的收集以及与美国(美国)结核病发病率下降平行的HTI时间段。 HTI数据集用于该次要数据分析中,以GIS分析结核病病例,病例频繁出现的地点以及它们与结核病传播相关的危险因素的关联性;该研究首次报告了结核病的发病率在得克萨斯州休斯敦的无家可归者之中。无家可归者是结核病的高危人群,但由于未进行计数,他们也是结核病发病率未知和未报告的人群。本文的第一部分确定了休斯顿地区的地方性结核病。许多报告居住在这些流行地区的休斯顿结核病病例也有当前或最近无家可归的结核病危险因素。将2004--2005年休斯敦无家可归者的统计数据与休斯敦结核病病例的历史HTI监测数据相结合,可以首次在休斯敦无家可归者中报告结核病风险。无家可归者更有可能是在美国出生的,属于基因型簇,并且属于更大的簇。计算得出的无家可归者平均发病率为411 / 100,000,而有住房的无家可归者的平均发病率为9.5 / 100,000。这些惊人的比率不是由共同感染驱动的,而是由社会决定因素驱动的。与那些住房状况稳定的人相比,没有庇护的人住院的天数更多,工作人员需要更多的随访时间。无家可归者是提高预防费用目标的一个具体例子,如果报告的结核病率是针对已知健康差异的特定地区而不是针对不同人群的正常化率,则可能会增加预防费用;据估计,休斯顿人中有27%使用公共交通工具。城市布局允许公交路线像大静脉一样延伸,甚至连接大都市地区内最多样化的人口。评估了结核病病例中频繁使用公交车(定义为每周骑行一次)的二次数据分析,以了解其与已知结核病危险因素的关系。评估了与公交车使用相关的基因型聚类的空间分布,以及报告的路线和属于确定的聚类的病例之间的流行病学联系。;报告频繁公交车使用的结核病病例更可能具有与人口相关的人口统计学和社会风险因素贫困,免疫抑制和健康差异。为结核分枝杆菌培养了相同比例的公交车乘客和非公交车乘客,但75%的公交车乘客是基因型聚类的,表明最近的传播,相比之下,非公交车乘客为56%(OR = 2.4,95%CI(2.0 ,2.8),p <0.001)。公交车乘客的平均集群大小为50.14 vs.28.9(p <0.001)。北京家庭聚类的聚类指纹2(n = 122)的二阶空间分析显示,基于案例的公共汽车使用情况,这些案例之间存在地理聚类。对属于这些集群的病例报告的路径进行单变量和多变量分析后发现,在14个集群中有10个与使用相关。地铁中的个别路线,包括一条为当地医院提供服务的路线,被发现是属于在休斯顿流行的一个集群的危险因素。这些路线本身在地理上连接了先前确定为地方性结核病的人口普查区。所调查的休斯顿地铁路线中,有78%(15/23)具有一个或多个打印组,表示每个HTI研究年度都频繁使用该组。我们提供了三个特定但与克隆相关的打印组的数据,并显示公交车使用情况按路线按时间聚集,并且是三个打印件之一的案例之间的唯一已知链接:打印件22(摘要由UMI缩短)。

著录项

  • 作者

    Feske, Marsha Lynn.;

  • 作者单位

    The University of Texas School of Public Health.;

  • 授予单位 The University of Texas School of Public Health.;
  • 学科 Health Sciences Epidemiology.;Geodesy.;Health Sciences Public Health.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2011
  • 页码 181 p.
  • 总页数 181
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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