May 27, 2007
British Doctors Want Indian Immigrants Screened for TB
London
Amidst rising incidence of tuberculosis in Britain, senior doctors
here want all immigrants from the Indian sub-continent to be
screened for the disease.
The doctors want the screening to also include immigrants from
Africa.
The Observer reported Sunday that two new outbreaks, in Luton and
Cardiff, had prompted concern that public health officials were
failing to come to grips with the disease.
Vivienne Nathanson, the British Medical Association's head of
science and ethics, said the re-emergence of TB was so serious that
ministers should consider the mandatory immunisation of all school
children.
He added that general practitioners should offer screening to new
patients who come from parts of the world where the disease is
common, including eastern Europe.
Mayur Lakhani, chairman of the Royal College of General
Practitioners, said: "My sense is that the health community has
taken its eye off the ball a bit in relation to TB. We shouldn't
think that this is a disease of the past."
Lakhani said primary care trusts, which deliver healthcare in local
areas, must do more to ensure that people coming to live in Britain
from high-risk countries were screened when they arrived at an
airport or port or when they registered with a general practitioner.
Students coming to Britain should also be tested.
Cases of TB in Britain rose by 11 percent between 2004 and 2005.
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