| Literature DB >> 31320923 |
Andrew T Boyd1,2,3, Susan T Cookson2,3, Ibrahim Almashayek4, Hiam Yaacoub5, M Saiful Qayyum6, Aleksandar Galev6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The displacement crisis in Syria poses challenges for tuberculosis (TB) control across the region. Since 2012 in Jordan and 2013 in Lebanon, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) has supported the National TB Program (NTP) in detecting and treating TB among Syrian refugees. In December 2016, IOM asked US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) staff to evaluate its program of support to Jordan and Lebanon's NTPs for TB control among Syrian refugees. This manuscript focuses on case-finding, including contact investigations, and treatment components of the IOM program during 2013-2015 in Jordan and 2015 in Lebanon.Entities:
Keywords: Case-finding; Contact investigations; Jordan; Lebanon; Refugees; Syria; Tuberculosis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31320923 PMCID: PMC6617573 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-019-0213-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Description of International Organization for Migration (IOM) support program to the Jordan and Lebanon National Tuberculosis Programs (NTPs) for TB control among Syrian refugees—Jordan and Lebanon, 2013–2015
| Program goal: Reduce susceptible and resistant tuberculosis transmission, morbidity, and mortality among Syrian refugees | |
|---|---|
| Objectives: | |
| 1) Increase TB awareness and knowledge of TB treatment services among Syrian refugees and health care workers | |
| 2) Increase TB screening among Syrian refugees | |
| 3) Increase TB diagnosis among Syrian refugees | |
| 4) Maximize treatment success among Syrian refugees | |
| 5) Support the development and implementation of national guidelines for effective management of latent TB infection (LTBI) | |
| Resources/Activities in Jordan, 2013–2015: | |
| • Engage community health workers to provide awareness sessions about TB disease and TB treatment services in refugee camps and to community organizations where Syrian refugees live | |
| • Provide symptom screening at international border entry point (until 2014) for arriving Syrian refugees | |
| • Employ physicians to provide assessment of presumed Syrian refugee TB cases where Syrian refuges live using mobile medical unit | |
| • Provide funds for culture and drug sensitivity testing, if indicated, for Syrian refugees | |
| • Provide funds for TB medications for Syrian refugees | |
| • Engage community health workers to provide directly observed therapy (DOT) to Syrian refugee TB cases in camps and contract community-based organizations (CBOs) to provide it where Syrian refugees live in the community | |
| • Provide funds for transportation for contacts to come to NTP clinic for contact investigations among Syrian refugees | |
| Resources/Activities in Lebanon, 2015 | |
| • Engage community health workers to provide mass TB symptom screenings in informal settlements and collective shelters where Syrian refugees live | |
| • Provide funds for transportation to refer presumed Syrian refugee TB cases to NTP clinics for physician assessment | |
| • Provide funds for culture and drug sensitivity testing, if indicated, for Syrian refugees | |
| • Provide funds for TB medications for Syrian refugees | |
| • Support salary for DOT coordinators (nurses) to provide DOT to Syrian refugee TB cases | |
| • Provide funds for transportation for contacts to come to NTP clinic for contact investigation among Syrian refugees | |
| • Provide funds for diagnostic workup for contacts among Syrian refugees |
Notified incident TB cases and rates among general population and Syrian refugees, Jordan, 2013–2015, and Lebanon, 2015
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| |||
| Year | 2013 n (%) | 2014 n (%) | 2015 n (%) |
| Notified incident TB cases (all forms) | 324 | 379 | 421 |
| Total population including foreign-borna | 7,215,000 | 7,416,000 | 7,595,000 |
| Calculated TB notification rate (notified cases/total population) | 4.5/100,000 | 5.1/100,000 | 5.5/100,000 |
| Notified incident TB cases among native Jordanians | 179 (55.2) | 216 (57.0) | 196 (46.6) |
| Notified incident TB cases among foreign-born non-Syrians | 66 (20.4) | 91 (24.0) | 167 (39.7) |
| Notified incident TB cases among Syrian refugees | 79 (24.4) | 72 (19.0) | 58 (13.8) |
| Total Syrian refugee populationb | 491,365 | 604,868 | 629,128 |
| Calculated TB notification rate among Syrian refugees (notified cases/total population) (95% CI) | 16.1/100,000 (12.9–20.0) | 11.9/100,000 (9.4–15.0) | 9.2/100,000 (7.1–11.9) |
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| |||
| Year | 2015 n (%) | ||
| Notified incident TB cases (all forms) | 650 | ||
| Total population including foreign-borna | 5,851,000 | ||
| Calculated TB notification rate (notified cases/total population) | 11.1/100,000 | ||
| Notified incident TB cases among native Lebanese | 297 (45.7) | ||
| Notified incident TB cases among foreign-born non-Syrians | 214 (32.9) | ||
| Notified incident TB cases among Syrian refugees | 139 (21.4) | ||
| Total Syrian refugee populationb | 1,174,830 | ||
| Calculated TB notification rate among Syrian refugees (notified cases/total population) (95% CI) | 11.8/100,000 (10.0–14.0) | ||
aMidyear population estimates 2013–2015 from UN Population Division
bMidyear population estimates from UNHCR data
Proportions of TB cases found among Syrian refugees residing in and outside of refugee camps, Jordan, 2015
| Year: 2015 | Proportion residing in refugee camps in Jordan, n (%) | Proportion residing outside refugee camps in Jordan, n (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population in Jordan | |||
| Refugee TB cases ( | 17 (29.3) | 41 (70.7) |
|
| Total refugee population ( | 107,517 (17.1) | 521,611 (82.9) | |
| Calculated TB notification rate (notified cases/total population) | 15.8/100,000 | 7.9/100,000 |
|
| Refugee TB cases ( | |||
| Male ( | 7 (41.2) | 25 (61.0) | 0.17 |
| Female ( | 10 (58.8) | 16 (39.0) | |
| Refugee TB cases ( | 35.5 (26.1–44.9) | 35.5 (28.9–42.0) | 1.00 |
aMidyear population estimates from UNHCR data
bBolded text signifies P value less than 0.05
Numbers of Syrian refugees screened for TB as contacts, Jordan, 2013–2015, and Lebanon, 2015
|
| |||
| Year | 2013, n | 2014, n | 2015, n |
| Number of Syrian refugees screened for TB as contacts of index TB cases | 220 | 120 | 180 |
| Number of incident TB cases among Syrian refugees found through contact investigations | 3 | 8 | 2 |
| Number of Syrian refugee contacts screened to find one active TB case (Number of refugee contacts screened /number of incident cases found) | 73.3 | 15.0 | 90.0 |
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| |||
| Year | 2015, n | ||
| Number of Syrian refugees screened for TB as contacts of index TB cases | 450 | ||
| Number of incident TB cases among Syrian refugees found through contact investigations | 15 | ||
| Number of Syrian refugee contacts screened to find one active TB case (Number of refugee contacts screened /number of incident cases found) | 30.0 | ||
TB contact investigations of Syrian index cases, Lebanon, 2015
| Lebanon | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Year: 2015 | Agreement between number of close contacts reported and number of contacts investigated or more contacts investigated than number reported, n (%) | Number of close contacts reported exceeded number of contacts investigated, n (%) | Odds ratio from bivariate analysis (95% CI) |
| Total Syrian index cases with household contacts listed ( | 98 (77.8) | 28 (22.2) | n/a |
| Type of TB | |||
| Pulmonary ( | 70 (74.5) | 24 (25.5) | 0.4 (0.1–1.3) |
| Extra-pulmonary ( | 28 (87.5) | 4 (12.5) | Ref |
| Sex | |||
| Male ( | 58 (78.4) | 16 (21.6) | 1.1 (0.5–2.5) |
| Female ( | 40 (76.9) | 12 (23.1) | Ref |
| Age group | |||
| Less than 5 years ( | 7 (100) | 0 (0) | 5.1 (0.3–91.4) |
| 5–14 years ( | 7 (100) | 0 (0) | 5.1 (0.3–91.4) |
| 15 years or greater ( | 84 (75.0) | 28 (25.0) | Ref |
Fig. 1Proportions of Syrian TB cases with cure or completion treatment outcome by year, Jordan and Lebanon, 2013–2015
Numbers, proportions, and factors associated with TB treatment outcome of cure or completion among Syrian refugees, Jordan and Lebanon, 2015
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| 2015 | 55 (94.8) | 3 (5.2) | n/a |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 29 (90.6) | 3 (9.4) | 0.2 (0.01–3.2) |
| Female | 26 (100) | 0 (0) | Ref |
| Age group | |||
| Less than 5 years | 6 (100) | 0 (0) | 0.9 (0.04–19.9) |
| 5–14 years | 3 (100) | 0 (0) | 0.5 (0.02–12.4) |
| 15 years or greater | 46 (93.9) | 3 (6.1) | Ref |
| Camp | 16 (94.1) | 1 (5.9) | 0.8 (0.1–9.7) |
| Non-camp | 39 (95.1) | 2 (4.9) | Ref |
| Lebanon | |||
| Year | Cure/Completion n (%) | Outcome other than cure or completion n (%) | Odds ratio from bivariate analysis (95% CI) |
| 2015 | 122 (87.8) | 17 (12.2) | n/a |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 68 (82.9) | 14 (17.1) |
|
| Female | 54 (94.7) | 3 (5.3) | Ref |
| Age group | |||
| Less than 5 years | 8 (100) | 0 (0) | 2.6 (0.1–47.0) |
| 5–14 years | 8 (88.9) | 1 (11.1) | 0.9 (0.1–5.4) |
| 15 years or greater | 106 (86.9) | 16 (13.1) | Ref |
*Bolded text signifies P value less than 0.05