OBJECTIVE:Tuberculosis (TB) is a major source of mortality in urban India, with many structural challenges to optimal care delivery. In the government TB program in Chennai, India's fourth most populous city, there is a 49% gap between the official number of smear-positive TB patients diagnosed and the official number registered in TB treatment within the city in 2014. We hypothesize that this "urban registration gap" is partly due to rural patients temporarily visiting the city for diagnostic evaluation. METHODS:We collected data for one month (May 2015) from 22 government designated microscopy centers (DMCs) in Chennai where 90% of smear-positive TB patients are diagnosed and coded patient addresses by location. We also analyzed the distr...
India has 23% of the global burden of active tuberculosis (TB) patients and 27% of the world’s “miss...
Background: Timely diagnosis and treatment initiation are critical to reduce the chain of transmissi...
Background: Timely diagnosis and treatment initiation are critical to reduce the chain of transmissi...
Setting: Private practitioners are frequently the first point of healthcare contact for patients wit...
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis (TB) notification in India by the Revised National TB Control Programme (RN...
Tuberculosis (TB) notification in India by the Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP) provide...
Background: Pretreatment loss to follow-up (PTLFU) is a barrier to tuberculosis (TB) control in Indi...
Abstract Background Pretreatment loss to follow-up (PTLFU) is a barrier to tuberculosis (TB) control...
In this study, we investigate differences in tuberculosis (TB) treatment outcomes between urban and ...
SettingTuberculosis (TB) hospital in Mumbai, India.ObjectiveTo describe the mobility patterns of per...
Background: Migrant labourers living in the slums of urban and industrial patches across India make ...
SettingTuberculosis (TB) hospital in Mumbai, India.ObjectiveTo describe the mobility patterns of per...
Background: Migrant labourers living in the slums of urban and industrial patches across India make ...
Tuberculosis (TB) remains the most common cause of infectious disease deaths worldwide. What is perh...
Tuberculosis (TB) remains the most common cause of infectious disease deaths worldwide. What is perh...
India has 23% of the global burden of active tuberculosis (TB) patients and 27% of the world’s “miss...
Background: Timely diagnosis and treatment initiation are critical to reduce the chain of transmissi...
Background: Timely diagnosis and treatment initiation are critical to reduce the chain of transmissi...
Setting: Private practitioners are frequently the first point of healthcare contact for patients wit...
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis (TB) notification in India by the Revised National TB Control Programme (RN...
Tuberculosis (TB) notification in India by the Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP) provide...
Background: Pretreatment loss to follow-up (PTLFU) is a barrier to tuberculosis (TB) control in Indi...
Abstract Background Pretreatment loss to follow-up (PTLFU) is a barrier to tuberculosis (TB) control...
In this study, we investigate differences in tuberculosis (TB) treatment outcomes between urban and ...
SettingTuberculosis (TB) hospital in Mumbai, India.ObjectiveTo describe the mobility patterns of per...
Background: Migrant labourers living in the slums of urban and industrial patches across India make ...
SettingTuberculosis (TB) hospital in Mumbai, India.ObjectiveTo describe the mobility patterns of per...
Background: Migrant labourers living in the slums of urban and industrial patches across India make ...
Tuberculosis (TB) remains the most common cause of infectious disease deaths worldwide. What is perh...
Tuberculosis (TB) remains the most common cause of infectious disease deaths worldwide. What is perh...
India has 23% of the global burden of active tuberculosis (TB) patients and 27% of the world’s “miss...
Background: Timely diagnosis and treatment initiation are critical to reduce the chain of transmissi...
Background: Timely diagnosis and treatment initiation are critical to reduce the chain of transmissi...