| Literature DB >> 25067955 |
Sheylla Nadjane Batista Lacerda1, Rayrla Cristina de Abreu Temoteo2, Tânia Maria Ribeiro Monteiro de Figueiredo3, Fernanda Darliane Tavares de Luna2, Milena Alves Nunes de Sousa4, Luiz Carlos de Abreu1, Fernando Luiz Affonso Fonseca1.
Abstract
Tuberculosis is a contagious infectious disease mainly caused by the bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis that still meets the priority criteria - high magnitude, transcendence and vulnerability - due to the threat it poses to public health. When taking into consideration the vulnerability conditions that favor the onset of the disease, this article aimed to investigate the implications originated from individual and social vulnerability conditions in which tuberculosis patients are inserted. Databases like MEDLINE, LILACS and SciELO were searched in Portuguese, Spanish and English using the descriptors tuberculosis and vulnerability, and 183 articles were found. After the selection criterion was applied, there were 22 publications left to be discussed. Some of the aspects that characterize the vulnerability to tuberculosis are: low-income and low-education families, age, poor living conditions, chemical dependency, pre-existing conditions/aggravations like diabetes mellitus and malnutrition, indigenous communities, variables related to health professionals, intense border crossings and migration, difficulty in accessing information and health services and lack of knowledge on tuberculosis. Much as such aspects are present and favor the onset of the disease, several reports show high incidence rates of tuberculosis in low vulnerability places, suggesting that some factors related to the disease are still unclear. In conclusion, health promotion is important in order to disfavor such conditions or factors of vulnerability to tuberculosis, making them a primary target in the public health planning process and disease control.Entities:
Keywords: Health vulnerability; Social vulnerability; Transmissible diseases prevention; Tuberculosis; Vulnerability; Vulnerability analysis; Vulnerability study
Year: 2014 PMID: 25067955 PMCID: PMC4110238 DOI: 10.1186/1755-7682-7-35
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Arch Med ISSN: 1755-7682
Amount of publications according to the descriptors from January, 2003 to May, 2013
| MEDLINE | 94 | 00 | 00 |
| LILACS | 18 | 20 | 14 |
| SCIELO | 15 | 10 | 12 |
Source: Database, 2013.
Figure 1Flowchart showing the methodological pathway of the search, from January 2003 to May 2013.
Data screened from the articles inserted in the review from January 2003 to May 2013
| [ | Brazil | 2012 | Ecological | Health administrative areas | Low income and educational levels |
| [ | Brazil | 2012 | Descriptive (quantitative) | 40 nurses and 36 nursing students | Lack of knowledge on the disease |
| [ | Brazil | 2011 | Transversal | 106 students | Age group 20–49 years, lack of knowledge on the disease |
| [ | Brazil | 2012 | Transversal | Notified data on all TB patients | Low income level, difficulty accessing information and health services, intense border crossing, indigenous people |
| [ | Brazil | 2012 | Descriptive case study | 55 subjects (36 health professionals and 19 TB patients | Low income and educational levels, number of people per household |
| [ | Brazil | 2005 | Descriptive retrospective | 532 TB patients’ medical records | Elderly patients |
| [ | Brazil | 2005 | Prospective and retrospective* | 9 indigenous communities | Indigenous people |
| [ | Chile | 2012 | Case control | Secondary data of 473 cases and 507 control | Diabetes Mellitus patients |
| [ | South Africa | 2010 | Transversal | 1,080 participants living in 336 dwellings (173 houses and 163 shanties) | Low income level (poor living conditions) |
| [ | Tajikistan | 2011 | Transversal | 509 migrating workers | Migrants |
| [ | Índia | 2011 | Qualitative (Focal groups and interviews) | 44 TB patients, 8 health professionals and 8 TB patients’ family members | Excessive alcohol intake |
| [ | Pakistan | 2012 | Cohort retrospective | 6,613 children under 15 in contact with TB patients | Contact with infected/bacilliferous people |
| [ | Hungary | 2009 | Transversal | 186 IV drug users | Use of IV drugs |
| [ | Brazil | 2011 | Descriptive (qualitative) | 19 TB patients | Lack of knowledge on the disease |
| [ | Brazil | 2010 | Descriptive (exploratory) | 26 TB patients | Low educational level, difficulty accessing information and health services, number of people sharing the same sleeping room |
| [ | Brazil | 2012 | Descriptive case study | 1 TB Control Program Team and 1 Family Health Team | Low income level (poor living conditions), malnutrition, unemployment or excessive working hours, excessive alcohol intake and use of other drugs |
| [ | Brazil | 2007 | Descriptive | 81 nursing workers | Lack of knowledge on the disease |
| [ | Brazil | 2013 | Qualitative | 7 TB patients | Elderly patients |
| [ | Madrid | 2009 | Transversal | 75 TB patients | Lack of knowledge on the disease |
| [ | Europe | 2006 | Transversal | Representatives of 22 countries | Prison inmates |
| [ | Washington | 2006 | Cohort | - | Homeless |
| [ | Pakistan | 2003 | Transversal | 386 prisoners | Prison inmates |
*Transversal, cohort, documental, review - a large number of objectives were used, and many studies within the same research project were performed with different methodologies.
Source: Database 2013.