The international journal of tuberculosis and lung disease : the official journal of the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease
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Legislative measures against smoking in Singapore began in the early 1970s, and can be said to have been the start of a comprehensive smoking control programme. With the launch of the National Smoking Control Programme (NSCP) in 1986, a National Smoking Control Coordinating Committee was set up to look into legislation and fiscal measures. To further increase the dimension and impact of the programme, a Civic Committee on Smoking Control was formed in 1996. ⋯ Several factors have helped make legislative measures work in Singapore. These include political will and support, starting legislation early, comprehensive legislative measures, enforcement measures and continuous review. To sustain these efforts, Singapore needs to continue to stay abreast of world-wide measures on smoking control.
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In 1998 the Government of Bangladesh changed its health and population sector strategy from a project-oriented approach (the Fourth Population and Health Project--FPHP) to sector-wide management (the Fifth Health and Population Sector Programme--HPSP). This article describes the development and achievements of the tuberculosis programme during the FPHP, and discusses the potential opportunities and challenges anticipated by the programme from the reformed health service delivery of the HPSP. 'Further strengthening of tuberculosis and leprosy control services' was one of the 66 projects of the FPHP. As part of the FPHP, the National Tuberculosis Programme policy was revised in 1992 and the project was implemented in phases. ⋯ Tuberculosis services will become more accessible as community clinics deliver essential health services for every 6000 population. Non-public health care providers, who contribute significantly to health services in the country, will be involved in service delivery. The main challenge is to maintain the quality of successful projects, such as tuberculosis control, during the transition period.
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Int. J. Tuberc. Lung Dis. · May 2000
Drug-resistant tuberculosis in South African gold miners: incidence and associated factors.
A gold mining company in the Free State Province of South Africa. ⋯ Anti-tuberculosis drug resistance has remained stable despite the HIV epidemic and increasing TB rates. Directly observed therapy may have contributed to containing the level of drug resistance. Adherence to and completion of treatment are essential to prevent drug resistance and treatment failure, including in situations with high HIV prevalence.
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Int. J. Tuberc. Lung Dis. · Mar 2000
Modeling the epidemiology and economics of directly observed therapy in Baltimore.
From 1958 to 1978, Baltimore maintained one of the highest pulmonary tuberculosis (TB) rates in the US. But, from 1978 to 1992 its TB rate declined by 64.3% and its ranking for TB fell from second highest among large US cites to twenty-eighth. This TB trend coincided with the implementation of an aggressive directly observed therapy (DOT) program by Baltimore's Health Department. ⋯ Our model predicts that Baltimore's TB decline accompanying DOT resulted in health care savings equal to twice the city's total TB control budget for this period. These results are most plausibly due to DOT, since it was the only major change in Baltimore's TB control program, and rising TB risk factors-AIDS, injection drug use, poverty-in a city where TB had been epidemic should have triggered a TB increase as in comparable US cities, rather than the observed decline. As national TB rates continue to decline it will be important to identify ways to capture and reinvest these savings to support effective TB control programs.