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WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe : Britain
TB threat grows in Britain
By Barry Mason
26 July 2001
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Medical experts are warning about the developing threat of
tuberculosis (TB) in Britain, and especially in London.
The Annual Public Health Report 2000/2001 produced by the East
London & The City Health Authority highlights some of the
conditions that have enabled TB to take a hold. Entitled “Health in
the East End,” the report points out that under a third of the cases
were among people who had lived in the area for less than five
years. It showed that boroughs with high numbers of notified TB
cases, such as Newham, Tower Hamlets and Hackney, were also
those with higher than average levels of deprivation.
Homelessness is another factor. The report states that 25 percent
of homeless people in London are infected with TB, however only
around 2.5 percent show symptoms of the disease. The three
boroughs mentioned above also include high numbers of homeless
people. The incidence of HIV associated with TB is estimated at 7-
8 percent in London, but the report points out this is probably an
underestimate. From blood tests on pregnant women, Newham and
Hackney have a higher HIV incidence than the London average.
A detailed analysis of TB cases in London has shown that 50
percent of sufferers were unemployed, five percent had experienced
homelessness, over seven percent abused alcohol and seven
percent were infected with HIV.
The nature of the tuberculosis bacterium, with its waxy coating of
fatty acids and lipids (fats), means it needs persistent and
consistent antibiotic treatment. The drugs need to be taken for a
period of six to nine months. The report states, “Sticking to and
completing a course of TB treatment is challenging in East
London”. High population mobility, poverty, alcoholism, substance
abuse and cultural barriers make completion of a drug regimen
difficult.
Amongst the measures the report calls for are:
* An adequately resourced TB service and infrastructure, including
appropriate ratios of TB specialist nurses and support staff to
notifications.
* Specially constructed “negative-pressure” wards with an artificially
maintained air pressure lower than that outside to contain the TB
bacteria, which can be spread through the air.
* Effective infection control arrangements to ensure infectious and
drug-resistant cases of TB are managed appropriately.
* A research programme on the specific barriers to compliance that
affect TB patients in East London.
In July this year, London family doctors (GPs) have warned of the
dangers of a developing TB epidemic in the capital. “This is a
disaster waiting to happen. It is only a matter of time until London
sees a serious out-break such as that in Leicester earlier this
year”, said Dr Stewart Drage, secretary to several London GP
committees. Dr Michael Soljak, Director of Public Health for Ealing,
Hammersmith and Hounslow said that although three extra nurses
had been recruited to work with the TB cases this was not enough
to keep up with the rising levels of the disease. He said the
increased number of nurses “would have been enough if we hadn’t
seen the increase in cases. What we have found is that we are
barely keeping up with the disease.”
In July 2000, Professor John Grange of the Centre for Infectious
Disease at University College London said London had become a
hotspot for the disease, and called for the number of specialist TB
nurses to be increased to a level of one nurse to every 50 notified
cases of the disease. The Department of Health dismissed his
claim that the situation in Britain “was waiting for human disaster”.
Improvements in health care and the widespread use of antibiotics
meant that TB was all but eradicated in the UK by the 1960s. In
1999, the Labour government abandoned the routine vaccination
programme for school children with the long established BCG
vaccine, but this has now been resumed in London with plans to
restore it nationwide.
Since 1987 there has been a resurgence of the disease. In 1990,
there were 1,600 cases in England and Wales. By 1999 there were
7,000 cases, with the biggest rise being amongst the 25-64 age
group. In 2000, nearly 400 people died of the disease nation-wide.
By 2001, the number of cases in Britain has risen to nearly 7,500,
of which 3,000 were in London. In London 50 new cases are
currently diagnosed each week. Commenting on the increase in TB
cases in London, Dr Heather Milburn, a chest physician at Guy’s
and St Thomas’ Hospital, said, “Those of us who look after TB
patients may find we’re not able to cope.”
Districts in East London have been particularly affected: Newham
with 108 cases per 100,000 of its population has made London
“tuberculosis capital of the affluent Western world”. The figures
even put it ahead of Russia, where the collapse of the public health
system has led to 91 cases per 100,000, whereas in India the
figure is 41 per 100,000.
The London Times of February 6 this year reports the concerns of
Professor Grange, who said, “If you look at a graph of what
happened in New York ten years ago, and what is happening now
in London, the lines are very similar. TB is like a forest fire-it may
start small, but you never know when the wind is going to get up
and blow through the whole forest.”
“We have lobbied ministers, and the feedback has been ‘Problem
what problem?’” adding, “The upsurge may go down. But if London
goes the way of New York, some people will be sorry that they did
not nip it at birth.”
An article in the January-February 2000 bulletin of the American
Centres for Disease Control posed the question, “Could a
Tuberculosis Epidemic Occur in London as it did in New York?”
The paper, by Andrew C Hayward of Nottingham University and
Richard J Coker of St Mary’s Hospital London, explained the
similarities between London and New York.
In both cities the rates of TB infection are greatest in areas with low
socio-economic conditions associated with large immigrant
populations. In New York’s central Harlem the incidence of the
disease rose from 79 per 100,000 in 1980 to 170 per 100,00 in
1989. In London, the boroughs of Newham, Tower Hamlets and
Brent contained 77-79 cases per 100,000 at the time the paper
was published. The article added that in some parts of London the
rate had increased two to three-fold in the last 10 years. In both
cities, the increased incidence was found mainly among young
adults between 15-24 years of age. In both cities increasing rates
amongst homeless people were noted. The association with HIV in
both cities adds to the virulence of the disease.
In New York, by 1997, some 400 negative-pressure isolation
facilities had been put in place. In 1995 in London there were only
103 such facilities.
The paper calls for London to learn the lessons of the epidemic in
New York. “Urgent action is needed to strengthen TB control in
London if an epidemic like that in New York City is to be avoided.”
Copyright 1998-2001
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved

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