| Literature DB >> 23621907 |
Alexander Klotz1, Abdoulaye Harouna, Andrew F Smith.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While the overall population prevalence of tuberculosis in Quebec has been declining for many years, tuberculosis is still disproportionately more prevalent among the immigrant and Inuit communities. As such, the aim of this study was to forecast the incidence of tuberculosis in the Province of Quebec over time in order to examine the possible impact of future preventative and treatment programs geared to reducing such disparities.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23621907 PMCID: PMC3668279 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Flow chart of the model.
Definitions and values of parameters
| b | Birth/immigration rate | 0.03/person/year | [ |
| μ | Death rate | 0.007/person/year | [ |
| β | Transmission Parameter | 5/person/year | Fitting |
| q | Proportion of exposed immigrants | 0.01 | [ |
| α | Probability of infectiousness | 0.1 | [ |
| K | Rate of progression | 0.05/person/year | [ |
| γ1 | Rate of recovery (latent) | 0.22/person/year | [ |
| γ2 | Rate of recovery (infectious) | 0.87/person/year | [ |
Greek letter parameters were subject to a sensitivity analysis varying them by up to 25%.
Figure 2Retroactive and future predictions of the model for the Canadian-born non-indigenous Quebec population. Error bars represent standard deviations of forecast distributions. Inset: Comparison of mean long term trend treating the Canadian-born and immigrant populations separately (blue), and with full interaction (green).
Figure 3Retroactive and future predictions of the model for the immigrant population. Error bars represent standard deviations of forecast distributions. Inset: Long-term prediction, showing the eventual rise in the late 21st century.
Figure 4Retroactive and future predictions of the model for the Inuit Quebec population. Error bars represent standard deviations of forecast distributions. The red curve represents the prediction when re-infection (a transfer of recovered persons to the exposed category) is taken into account, and the error bars are suppressed at early times as a visual aide.
Summary of model predictions
| 2015 | 48 (16) | 102 (22) | 30 (7) | 181 (28) | 16% |
| 2020 | 38 (15) | 86 (22) | 33 (6) | 158 (27) | 26% |
| 2025 | 24 (15) | 76 (22) | 35 (5) | 141 (28) | 34% |
| 2030 | 19 (11) | 64 (22) | 36 (3) | 124 (24) | 42% |
Parentheses represent bounds on predictions.