|
||||||||
Media Home | Contact Us |
|
|
|
PRESS CONTACT: Division of Media Relations CDC, Office of Communication (404) 6393286 |
Summary not available.
PRESS CONTACT: Division of Media Relations CDC, Office of Communication (404) 6393286 |
Summary not available.
There are high levels of TB in Botswana prisons.
PRESS CONTACT: Office of Communication CDC, National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention (404) 6398895 |
A survey of four prisons in Gaborone, the capital city of Botswana, found a high prevalence of tuberculosis (TB) among prisoners and prison guards. TB prevalence rates were estimated to be 3,797 cases per 100,000 among prisoners and 2,662 cases per 100,000 among prison guards. While similar TB prevalence data are not available for the general population, the prevalence rate among prisoners and prison guards is estimated to be several times higher than that of the general population. One of the strongest risk factors for TB was a longer period of incarceration, and transmission was likely facilitated by overcrowded cells and poor ventilation. To help reduce high TB rates in these facilities, health officials urged that inmates be screened and, if needed, treated for TB at prison entry and periodically thereafter and that thorough contact investigation be conducted when new TB cases were identified.
Despite recent progress, surveillance and vaccination activities
need further improvements to interrupt poliovirus transmission in Egypt.
PRESS CONTACT: Howard Gary, PhD CDC, National Immunization Program (404) 6398894 |
Egypt made significant progress toward poliovirus eradication during 2002. The ability to find poliomyelitis cases has been improved and over 1 million additional children have been vaccinated in national vaccination campaigns. Only 7 cases of polio were identified during 2002. Genetic analyses of viruses isolated both from cases and from sewage indicate that transmission has been reduced to fewer lineages. The primary objective in Egypt now is to maintain and extend these improvements.
In 1994, countries in the Region of the Americas set a goal to
interrupt indigenous measles transmission.
PRESS CONTACT: Division of Media Relations CDC, Office of Communication (404) 6393286 |
Summary not available.
CDC Home | Search | Health Topics A-Z This page last reviewed March 28, 2003 Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention |