| Literature DB >> 27362428 |
Daniel Barros de Castro1,2, Rosemary Costa Pinto1, Bernardino Cláudio de Albuquerque1, Megumi Sadahiro1, José Ueleres Braga2,3,4.
Abstract
Despite the availability of tuberculosis prevention and control services throughout Amazonas, high rates of morbidity and mortality from tuberculosis remain in the region. Knowledge of the social determinants of tuberculosis in Amazonas is important for the establishment of public policies and the planning of effective preventive and control measures for the disease. To analyze the relationship of the spatial distribution of the incidence of tuberculosis in municipalities and regions of Amazonas to the socioeconomic factors and indigenous tuberculosis component, from 2007 to 2013. An ecological study was conducted based on secondary data from the epidemiological surveillance of tuberculosis. A linear regression model was used to analyze the relationship of the annual incidence of tuberculosis to the socioeconomic factors, performance indicators of health services, and indigenous tuberculosis component. The distribution of the incidence of tuberculosis in the municipalities of Amazonas was positively associated with the Gini index and the population attributable fraction of tuberculosis in the indigenous peoples, but negatively associated with the proportion of the poor and the unemployment rate. The spatial distribution of tuberculosis in the different regions of Amazonas was heterogeneous and closely related with the socioeconomic factors and indigenous component of tuberculosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27362428 PMCID: PMC4928831 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0158574
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Municipalities and health regions of the state of Amazonas.
Source: Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE).
Average rate of incidence of TB in the general population, indigenous and non-indigenous populations, and the population attributable fraction of TB in the indigenous populations in the health regions and state of Amazonas from 2007 to 2013.
| State/Region | Area (km2) | Total population | Indigenous population | Average annual TB cases (CI | Average annual age and sex-adjusted incidence rate per 100,000 inhabitants (CI | Average annual incidence rate in the non-indigenous population per 100,000 inhabitants (CI | Average annual incidence rate in the indigenous population per 100,000 inhabitants (CI | Indigenous TB population attributable fraction (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazonas | 1,559,148 | 3,483,985 | 168,680 | 2,189 (2,034–2,344) | 62.4 (59–65) | 61.5 (58–64) | 81.1 (68–93) | 1.5 |
| Alto Solimões | 213,235 | 224,094 | 61,901 | 105 (94–115) | 51.1 (47–55) | 42.3 (37–46) | 54.2 (41–66) | 7.0 |
| Baixo Amazonas | 68,382 | 214,881 | 11,993 | 98 (79–116) | 46.7 (38–54) | 42.6 (33–51) | 76.0 (43–108) | 4.2 |
| Entorno (East) | 70,756 | 2,037,985 | 14,222 | 1,578 (1,433–1,723) | 74.6 (69–79) | 76.9 (72–81) | 99.9 (70–129) | 0.2 |
| Entorno (West) | 294,432 | 81,760 | 48,133 | 55 (38–73) | 70.5 (47–93) | 30.7 (25–36) | 95.2 (55–135) | 54.4 |
| Médio Amazonas | 58,424 | 149,130 | 671 | 70 (56–85) | 47.2 (37–56) | 46.4 (37–55) | 62.8 (43–81) | 0.2 |
| Rio Juruá | 93,205 | 117,043 | 4,756 | 35 (30–42) | 36.1 (29–42) | 19.1 (13–24) | 303.2 (138–468) | 37.5 |
| Rio Madeira | 221,081 | 165,663 | 10,402 | 60 (46–75) | 38.6 (28–48) | 32.0 (22–41) | 112.1 (37–186) | 14.0 |
| Rio N. Solimões | 157,223 | 252,027 | 2,485 | 108 (89–127) | 45.8 (37–53) | 42.9 (36–48) | 44.3 (8–80) | 0.0 |
| Rio Purus | 250,417 | 118,314 | 8,235 | 38 (31–45) | 34.8 (26–43) | 30.3 (21–39) | 65.4 (46–84) | 7.7 |
| Triângulo | 131,990 | 123,088 | 5,882 | 40 (34–45) | 35.9 (30–41) | 32.0 (26–37) | 21.9 (4–38) | -1.5 |
a2010 census data.
b95% Confidence Interval.
cEntorno Manaus and Rio Negro (East).
dEntorno Manaus and Rio Negro (West).
Factors associated with the incidence of tuberculosis in municipalities of the state of Amazonas from 2007 to 2013.
| Factor | Mean (sd) | Min | Max | Regression coefficient | P value | 95% Confidence interval |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gini index | 0.61(0.05) | 0.52 | 0.80 | 110.7 | 0.037 | 6.88 to 214.63 |
| Indigenous PAF | 0.22(0.23) | 0.01 | 0.92 | 31.3 | 0.026 | 3.97 to 58.73 |
| Unemployment rate | 73.8(9.6) | 33.5 | 88.6 | −5.6 | 0.000 | −2.06 to −0.96 |
| Proportion of the poor | 7.6(3.3) | 1.6 | 18.9 | −2.8 | 0.008 | −3.61 to −0.58 |
aUnemployment rate at 18 years of age.
bProportion of the poor population.
Fig 2Spatial distribution of the TB incidence, socioeconomic factors, and the indigenous TB component in the state of Amazonas, from 2007 to 2013.
(A) Age- and sex-adjusted TB incidence rate. (B) PAF of TB in indigenous peoples. (C) Gini index. (D) Unemployment rate at 18 years of age. (E) Proportion of the poor population.