| Literature DB >> 25170460 |
Alexander Klotz1, Abdoulaye Harouna1, Andrew F Smith2.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: The aim of this research was to conduct a thorough review on the literature of tuberculosis in Canada and the Province of Quebec. To achieve this aim, an exhaustive literature review of tuberculosis in the Province of Quebec was undertaken. Data was collected with the goal of creating an epidemiological and public health evidence base to forecast the spread of tuberculosis. A keyword search strategy was used to find relevant articles from the peer-reviewed literature using the electronic search engine PubMed and a search of other relevant federal and provincial government databases. Twenty-nine peer-reviewed publications and twenty government reports containing information about the incidence or prevalence of tuberculosis in the Province of Quebec were included in the analysis. An analysis of the data revealed that while tuberculosis rates have been decreasing in both Canada and Quebec with an overall incidence below 3 per 100,000 of population in 2007, among immigrants and the Inuit communities in Quebec, the incidence and prevalence of the disease still remains high and reached 18 per 100,000 and 100 per 100,000, respectively in 2007. In general, while tuberculosis does not pose a significant burden to the general population, it does continue to affect certain sub-groups disproportionately, including select immigrants and Inuit communities in Quebec. Efforts to ensure that cost-effective healthcare interventions are delivered in a timely fashion should be pursued to reduce the associated morbidity and mortality of tuberculosis in the Province of Quebec. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Funding for this research was provided to Medmetrics Inc., by McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Génome Québec and the Ministère de Développement Economique, Innovation et Exportation du Gouvernement du Québec. The authors also wish to thank Drs. John White and Marcel Behr, both of McGill University and Dr Suneil Malik of the Infectious Disease Program in the Office of Biotechnology, Genomics and Population Health at the Public Health Agency of Canada for comments and suggestions on earlier drafts of this manuscript.Entities:
Keywords: Canada; Quebec; epidemiology; prevalence; tuberculosis
Year: 2012 PMID: 25170460 PMCID: PMC4140365 DOI: 10.4081/jphr.2012.e25
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Public Health Res ISSN: 2279-9028
Summary of relevant literature.
| Document | Year | Cases | Years | Demographic | Additional notes of interest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nguyen | 2003 | 46 | 1990-2000 | Nunavik Inuit | |
| Menzies and Oxlade[ | 2006 | 1574 | 2004 | Canada | Cost of TB in Canada |
| Brassard[ | 1999 | 1500 | 1979-1996 | Quebec | |
| Rivest | 1998 | 798 | 1992-1995 | Montreal | Complement official |
| Enarson and Grzybowski[ | 1986 | 28,000 | 1970-1981 | Canadian natives | |
| Gaudette and Ellit[ | 2003 | 2082 | 1984-1988 | Canada | TB in Canada |
| Frappier | 1971 | 6000 | 1956-1961 | Quebec under 29 | Effect of vaccination |
| Ashikari and Menzies[ | 1995 | 782 | 1987-1991 | Montreal | |
| Menzies | 1997 | 88 | 1987-1991 | Montreal children | |
| Dasgupta | 2000 | 27 | 1996-1997 | Montreal | Cost analysis |
| Smeja[ | 2000 | 1274 | 1993-1998 | Quebec | Aboriginal TST |
| Kulaga | 2002 | 303 | 1997-1998 | Montreal | |
| Dion | 2002 | 112 | 1999-2000 | Montreal | Health preferences |
| Kulaga | 2004 | 216 | 1996-1998 | Montreal | No evidence of |
| Dion | 2004 | 112 | 1999-2000 | Montreal | Preference among TB patients |
| Richards[ | 2005 | 322 | 1999-2000 | Montreal | TB surveillance new immigrant |
| Menzies[ | 2005 | 104 | 2002 | Montreal | Latent TB |
| Decarie | 2005 | 66 | 2005 | Laurentians | |
| Harris | 2006 | 3416 | 1997-1998 | Canada | Analysis of HIV co-infection in Canada |
| Lavigne | 2006 | 320 | 1998-2000 | Montreal | Smoking |
| Haase[ | 2007 | 900 | 1996-2000 | Montreal | Spatial analysis within Montreal |
| Fortin | 2007 | 670 | 1998-2003 | Montreal | Prevalence of positive TST test |
| Reed | 2008 | 798 | 2001-2007 | Montreal immigrants | Tracks strain by country |
| Lacroix | 2008 | 115 | 1998-2007 | Monteregie | |
| Carter | 2009 | 1543 | 1996-2004 | Montreal | Overlaps with other data |
| Aspler | 2010 | 420 | 2007 | Canada | |
| Brassard and Remis[ | 2004 | 262 | 1988-1998 | Montreal | Drug users |
| Smith | 2011 | 9145 | 1998-2003 | Quebec | Latent TB in general population |
| Wanyeki | 2006 | 595 | 1996-2000 | Montreal | Dwellings and crowding |
Summary of the incidence of tuberculosis in Canada and Quebec in 2009.
| Group | Canada cases | Quebec cases | Canada incidence per 100,000 | Quebec incidence per 100,000 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canadian non-indigenous | 237 | 45 | 1 | 0.7 |
| Immigrants | 1003 | 131 | 13.3 | 12.2 |
| Inuit | 89 | 14 | 155.8 | 118.1 |
| Aboriginal Canadians (non-Inuit) | 228 | 5 | 27.4 | 6.3 |
| Other | 42 | 0 | <1 | 0 |
| Total | 1599 | 195 | 4.7 | 2.5 |
Figure 1.Number of cases and incidence of TB in Canada and Quebec 1980-2009. Sources: Ministre de la Santé et Services Sociaux, Quebec[2, 6] and Public Health Agency of Canada.[8]
Figure 2.Number of TB cases among immigrants in Quebec and Canada, 1995-2009, and percentage of immigrant cases. Sources: Ministre de la Santé et Services Sociaux, Quebec[2] and Public Health Agency of Canada.[8]
Figure 3.Number of TB cases among Inuit in Canada and Quebec, 1995-2009. Sources: Ministre de la Santé et Services Sociaux, Quebec[2] and Public Health Agency of Canada.[8]
Figure 4.Distribution of cases with respect to age, and the ratio of male to female cases with respect to age.