| Literature DB >> 27510239 |
J G Taylor1, T A Yates2, M Mthethwa3, F Tanser4, I Abubakar5, H Altamirano1.
Abstract
SETTING: Molecular epidemiology suggests that most Mycobacterium tuberculosis transmission in high-burden settings occurs outside the home.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27510239 PMCID: PMC4978153 DOI: 10.5588/ijtld.16.0085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Tuberc Lung Dis ISSN: 1027-3719 Impact factor: 2.373
Figure 1Photographs, clockwise from top left, of the clinic waiting room, the church, the high school classroom and the tavern.
Figure 2Carbon dioxide sensor mounted in the rafters of the church at approximately 2 m height.
Figure 3Ranges and interquartile ranges of the fraction of indoor air that was rebreathed air during the hours that the buildings were open to the public. These estimates were based on paired internal and external carbon dioxide measurements.
Estimated probabilities of an individual becoming infected with M. tuberculosis in the different monitored buildings
Estimated annual probabilities of acquiring M. tuberculosis infection in each public space
Figure 4Clinic waiting room as modelled in CONTAM, with proposed retrofits. Low-cost retrofits (two additional windows or a chimney) can be seen in grey on the left, while the more substantial re-construction of external walls can be seen on the right.
Changes in M. tuberculosis transmission risk following building retrofit, as estimated from CONTAM modelling of building ventilation *
Building observation data: building occupancy and how those data were obtained
Model sensitivity to assumptions regarding quanta production rates: probability of M. tuberculosis infection per visit
Model sensitivity to assumptions regarding quanta production rates: probability of M. tuberculosis infection per year
Changes in M. tuberculosis transmission risk following CONTAM modelled retrofits under different assumptions about quanta production rates, for both single infectors and scaled for estimated tuberculosis prevalence