Epidemiological Profile and Determinants of Tuberculosis in Urban Nepalese Population

Introduction: Tuberculosis has evolved through ages to remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Despite having a very successful Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course program, tuberculosis is still one of the most widespread infections in Nepal. This study was done to observe t...

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Main Authors: Subash Bhatta, Nayana Pant
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: HEAD Nepal 2019-12-01
Series:Nepalese Medical Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.nepjol.info/index.php/nmj/article/view/25946
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spelling doaj-7df37100e411453580bd2c970a9c73a02020-11-25T01:30:01ZengHEAD NepalNepalese Medical Journal2631-20932645-85862019-12-012225025410.3126/nmj.v2i2.2594625946Epidemiological Profile and Determinants of Tuberculosis in Urban Nepalese PopulationSubash Bhatta0Nayana Pant1Geta Eye HospitalGeta Eye Hospital, Kailali, NepalIntroduction: Tuberculosis has evolved through ages to remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Despite having a very successful Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course program, tuberculosis is still one of the most widespread infections in Nepal. This study was done to observe the epidemiological profile of tuberculosis patients in an urban Nepalese population. Materials and Methods: 585 newly diagnosed cases of pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis in two tertiary level hospitals in the country were enrolled in the study during a period of 18months. A standard questionnaire was formatted and the required information was acquired with the help of interview and investigation reports. Results: The mean age of presentation was 35.76 with a male to female ratio of 1.48:1.57% of the cases had less than primary education with 26 % being illiterates. The most commonly involved occupational group was farmers (22%) followed by students (20%) and laborers (14%). 22% of cases had a history of contact with tuberculosis in the family. 41 % were smokers and 18 % abused alcohol. Pulmonary tuberculosis comprised 68% of the total cases. The most common extrapulmonary presentation was lymph node TB (28%) followed by pleural effusion (21.5%) and tubercular meningitis (16%). Conclusions: Young people with lower literacy levels and with a family history of tuberculosis are at increased risk of acquiring tuberculosis and community approaches for tuberculosis control should target this group to reduce the burden of the diseasehttps://www.nepjol.info/index.php/nmj/article/view/25946alcohol abuse; extrapulmonary; pulmonary; smoking;tuberculosis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Subash Bhatta
Nayana Pant
spellingShingle Subash Bhatta
Nayana Pant
Epidemiological Profile and Determinants of Tuberculosis in Urban Nepalese Population
Nepalese Medical Journal
alcohol abuse; extrapulmonary; pulmonary; smoking;
tuberculosis
author_facet Subash Bhatta
Nayana Pant
author_sort Subash Bhatta
title Epidemiological Profile and Determinants of Tuberculosis in Urban Nepalese Population
title_short Epidemiological Profile and Determinants of Tuberculosis in Urban Nepalese Population
title_full Epidemiological Profile and Determinants of Tuberculosis in Urban Nepalese Population
title_fullStr Epidemiological Profile and Determinants of Tuberculosis in Urban Nepalese Population
title_full_unstemmed Epidemiological Profile and Determinants of Tuberculosis in Urban Nepalese Population
title_sort epidemiological profile and determinants of tuberculosis in urban nepalese population
publisher HEAD Nepal
series Nepalese Medical Journal
issn 2631-2093
2645-8586
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Introduction: Tuberculosis has evolved through ages to remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Despite having a very successful Directly Observed Treatment, Short-course program, tuberculosis is still one of the most widespread infections in Nepal. This study was done to observe the epidemiological profile of tuberculosis patients in an urban Nepalese population. Materials and Methods: 585 newly diagnosed cases of pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis in two tertiary level hospitals in the country were enrolled in the study during a period of 18months. A standard questionnaire was formatted and the required information was acquired with the help of interview and investigation reports. Results: The mean age of presentation was 35.76 with a male to female ratio of 1.48:1.57% of the cases had less than primary education with 26 % being illiterates. The most commonly involved occupational group was farmers (22%) followed by students (20%) and laborers (14%). 22% of cases had a history of contact with tuberculosis in the family. 41 % were smokers and 18 % abused alcohol. Pulmonary tuberculosis comprised 68% of the total cases. The most common extrapulmonary presentation was lymph node TB (28%) followed by pleural effusion (21.5%) and tubercular meningitis (16%). Conclusions: Young people with lower literacy levels and with a family history of tuberculosis are at increased risk of acquiring tuberculosis and community approaches for tuberculosis control should target this group to reduce the burden of the disease
topic alcohol abuse; extrapulmonary; pulmonary; smoking;
tuberculosis
url https://www.nepjol.info/index.php/nmj/article/view/25946
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