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Tuberculosis in Tennessee “Goodbye Don’t Mean I ‘m Gone” Jon Warkentin, MD, MPH State TB Control Officer Tennessee Department of Health 6th Annual Fall Symposium – Middle TN APIC Baptist Hospital, Nashville, TN September 13, 2012 1 Disclosure In accordance with Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) guidelines, I, Jon Warkentin, have disclosed that I have no financial relationships with pharmaceutical or medical manufactory companies that would pose a conflict of interest in this presentation. 2 Disclaimer The presenter is a “TB evangelist,” not an infectious disease clinical specialist Focus will not be on presenting data from the scientific literature A call to “best practices” and enhanced public health capacity “Blues-you-can-use” 3 Objectives 1. Describe the changing epidemiology of TB in Tennessee 2. Explain the three-tiered hierarchy of TB infection controls 3. Understand the key role of the ICP in preventing TB transmission 4 Pop Quiz 1. Who wrote the song, “Goodbye Don’t Mean I’m Gone”? 2. Name of album? 3. Year of release? 4. How old are you? 5 Objective 1. Describe the changing epidemiology of TB in Tennessee 6 7 8 TB as a critical public health issue Worldwide Impact 8,000,000 people develop active TB every year Each one can infect between 10-15 people in one year just by breathing 9 TB as a critical public health issue Worldwide Impact Someone dies of TB every 15 seconds Worldwide, over 2,000,000 people die annually from TB, mostly in less developed countries 10 TB Case Rates TN and United States, 1986-2011 Case Rate per 100,000 Population 14 12 10 Tennessee US 8 6 4 2 0 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00 02 04 06 08 10 Year 11 Reported TB Cases Tennessee, 1998-2011 450 400 350 300 439 382 383 313 308 285 277 299 282 277 235 250 202 200 193 156 150 100 50 0 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 Year 12 TB Cases by Gender Tennessee, 2007-2011 Percent of Cases 80 70 70.5 64.3 64.9 62.8 62.4 60 50 Male 40 Female 30 20 10 0 2007 2008 2009 Year 2010 2011 13 TB Cases by Age Group Tennessee, 2007-2011 Percent of Cases 40 30 20 10 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Year 0-4 5-14 15-24 25-44 45-64 14 TB Cases by Race/Ethnicity Tennessee, 2007-2011 60 50 Percent of Cases 40 30 20 10 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Year White Non-Hispanic American Indian/Alaskan Native Hispanic Multiple races Black Non-Hispanic Asian Hawaiian or other PI *Data do not include missing information; Race is Non-Hispanic and Hispanic is of all races. 15 Foreign-born TB Cases Tennessee, 2007-2011 90 50 87 45 80 69 69 70 40 35 60 Percentage of Cases Number of Cases 70 55 30 50 25 40 20 30 15 20 10 10 5 0 0 2007 2008 2009 Year 2010 Cases 2011 Percent 16 Countries of Birth for Foreign-born TB Cases, Tennessee, 2011 5.5% Mexico 16.4% 30.9% Guatemala India 21.8% Other Asian Countries Other African Countries 12.7% Other Central American Countries 12.7% 17 Site of TB Disease Tennessee, 2007-2011 70 Percent of Cases 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Year Pulmonary Extra-pulmonary Both 18 TB Cases with HIV Co-morbidity, Tennessee, 2007-2011 20 40 30 15 28 23 20 20 20 10 18 5 10 0 0 2007 2008 2009 2010 Percent of Cases Number of Cases 50 2011 Year † † Number Percent Includes all cases 19 Multi-Drug Resistant (MDR) TB Cases Tennessee, 2007-2011 Number of Cases 5 4 3 2 1 0 2007 2008 2009 Year 2010 2011^ Initial MDR * Acquired MDR** ^2011 Acquired MDR data are preliminary. * Initial MDR refers to those patients who were culture positive and that had initial drug susceptibility testing and who were found to have TB resistant to both INH and RIF. ** Acquired MDR refers to those patients who were alive at diagnosis and not initially found to have MDR TB, but developed MDR-TB during therapy. 20 MDR-TB in Tennessee – 2007 case 21 Mortality of TB Cases Tennessee, 2007-2011 80 Number of Cases 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 22 20 15 3 7 3 8 9 7 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011* 15 Year Dead at diagnosis Died during therapy *data are preliminary Note: Includes all causes of death. 22 Summary of TB Epidemiology 1. TB is a burgeoning global epidemic 2. Rate of decline in TB case rate in U.S. has slowed, increasing in some states 3. Pediatric TB disease is sentinel for ongoing TB transmission 4. Migration/immigration link every corner of the globe with Tennessee 5. Substantial racial/ethnic disparities in TN 23 Objective 2. Explain the three-tiered hierarchy of TB infection controls 24 Three-tiered hierarchy of TB infection control measures 1. Administrative controls 2. Environmental controls 3. Use of respiratory protective equipment 25 1. Administrative controls (a) First and most important! Assigning responsibility for TB infection control in the setting Conducting a TB risk assessment of the setting Developing and instituting a written TB infectioncontrol plan Ensuring the timely availability of recommended laboratory processing, testing, and reporting of results to the ordering physician 26 1. Administrative controls (b) Implementing effective work practices for the management of patients with suspected or confirmed TB disease Ensuring proper cleaning and sterilization or disinfection of potentially contaminated equipment Training and educating health-care workers (HCWs) regarding TB, with specific focus on prevention, transmission, and symptoms Screening and evaluating HCWs who are at risk for TB disease or who might be exposed to Mtb 27 1. Administrative controls (c) Applying epidemiologic-based prevention principles, including the use of setting-related infection-control data Using appropriate signage advising respiratory hygiene and cough etiquette Coordinating efforts with the local or state health department. 28 2. Environmental controls Primary environmental controls - control the source of infection by using local exhaust ventilation and dilute and remove contaminated air by using general ventilation Secondary environmental controls control the airflow to prevent contamination of air in areas adjacent to the source (airborne infection isolation [AII] rooms) and clean the air by using high efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filtration, or ultraviolet germicidal irradiation. 29 3. Use of respiratory protective equipment (PPE) Reduce risk for exposure of HCWs to infectious droplet nuclei that have been expelled into the air from a patient with infectious TB disease Implementing a respiratory protection program Training HCWs on respiratory protection Training patients on respiratory hygiene and cough etiquette procedures 30 Objective 3. Understand the key role of the ICP in preventing TB transmission 31 Conditions with Increased Risk for Progression to TB Disease HIV infection / AIDS Substance abuse Recent infection Previous TB Diabetes Silicosis Corticosteroid tx Imm. therapy CA of head/neck Hemato./RE diseases ESRD Certain GI surgeries Malabsorption synd. Low body wt. (10%) Must have a high index of suspicion for active TB disease 32 The key role of the ICP Respiratory isolation! • If TB is in the differential diagnosis, respiratory isolation is mandatory • Recurrent “community-acquired pneumonia” (CAP) – THINK TB! 33 The key role of the ICP Release from respiratory isolation • Criteria for release from isolation*: 1. Clinical improvement on therapy, AND 2. Three AFB-negative smears, AND 3. At least 14 days of anti-TB therapy • Stable AFB+ patients may be released to home – but only after appropriate home assessment by LHD * For patients without a safe, stable living environment 34 The key role of the ICP Notify local health department! TN Statutes require medical providers, hospitals and labs to call report of all TB suspects to LHD within 12 hrs. • Contact investigation and case mgt. by LHD can start only after receiving report • Early reporting protects children! 35 The key role of the ICP Discharge planning ! • • • • • • Begins on hospitalization Day #1! Involve ICN and Social Worker Expect visit by LHD case manager Share information and records Coordinate release to ensure continuity of care by LHD NEVER release a homeless TB case/suspect from the hospital without consulting LHD 36 The key role of the ICP Respiratory isolation! • AFB smear-negative patients may still be infectious – protect patients, visitors, staff, yourself • Stable AFB+ patients may be released to home – but only after appropriate home assessment by LHD 37 Pearls That Work Rapid reporting of TB suspect to LHD • TN Statute requires provider phone report to LHD within 12 hrs. • Contact investigation starts only after report Discharge planning starts on Hosp. Day #1! • LHD case manager works with ICN and SW NEVER release a homeless TB pt. from the hospital before consulting the LHD 38 TB Resources for the Clinician ATS website – http://www.thoracic.org/statements/ • TB diagnosis and classification • TB treatment • Community Acquired Pneumonia (CAP) CDC website – important guidelines http://www.cdc.gov/tb/publications/guidelines/default.htm • • • • Infection control in healthcare facilities Contact investigation Patient education “Core Curriculum” for provider education & CME http://www.cdc.gov/tb/education/corecurr/index.htm 39 Pop Quiz - Answers 1. Who wrote the song, “Goodbye Don’t Mean I’m Gone”? Carole King 2. Name of album? Rhymes & Reasons 3. Year of release 1972 4. How old are you? You gotta be kiddin’ me! 40 Rhymes & Reasons - Revisited Old Lyrics - 1972 Missing you the way I do You know I'd like to see more of you But it's all I can do to be a mother My baby is in one hand, I've a pen in the other You know my love is always there for the taking And goodbye don't mean I'm gone http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njp0H2N3Y8w 41 Rhymes & Reasons - Revisited New Lyrics - 2012 Missing you TB the way I do You know I'd like to see more of you But it's all I can do to be a mother doctor My baby is X-ray’s in one hand, I've a pen Sputum can in the other You know my love INH is always there for the taking And goodbye don't mean I'm gone http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njp0H2N3Y8w 42 The Impact of Tuberculosis on Lives, Families, and Communities 43 44 Acknowledgements Dr. Michael Iseman – NJRMC, Denver Jason Cummins – TTBEP Epidemiologist TTBEP Program Staff American Thoracic Society Centers for Disease Control & Prevention World Health Organization Carole King 45 Jon Warkentin, MD, MPH State TB Control Officer Tennessee Dept. of Health Ph: 253-1364 Cell: 521-0315 E-mail: [email protected] 46