2009
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-9-371
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Treatment outcome of tuberculosis patients at Gondar University Teaching Hospital, Northwest Ethiopia. A five - year retrospective study

Abstract:

Abstract

Background

In Gondar University Teaching Hospital standardized tuberculosis prevention and control programme, incorporating Directly Observed Treatment, Short Course (DOTS) started in 2000. According to the proposal of World Health Organization (WHO), treatment outcome is an important indicator of tuberculosis control programs. This study investigated the outcome of tuberculosis treatment at Gondar University Teaching Hospital in Northwest Ethiopia.

Methods

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Cited by 127 publications
(235 citation statements)
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References 20 publications
(21 reference statements)
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“…High death rate, 16.3%, was observed among individuals with age >55 years which is in line with a study conducted previously in Gondar with a death rate of 15.8% 14 and a study elsewhere in the world 22 . Partly due to the increasing co morbidities and general deterioration with age high age has been reported to be a risk factor for death in TB patients [23][24][25] .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…High death rate, 16.3%, was observed among individuals with age >55 years which is in line with a study conducted previously in Gondar with a death rate of 15.8% 14 and a study elsewhere in the world 22 . Partly due to the increasing co morbidities and general deterioration with age high age has been reported to be a risk factor for death in TB patients [23][24][25] .…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…The default rate (1.7) and death rates (8.5%) found in this study were lower than that reported by Tessema, et al 14 but the death rate of the current report is higher than the report from Tigray region 15 . High death rate, 16.3%, was observed among individuals with age >55 years which is in line with a study conducted previously in Gondar with a death rate of 15.8% 14 and a study elsewhere in the world 22 .…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 56%
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“…HIV co-infection is the strongest known risk factor for progression of LTBI to active TB disease (Lai et al 2016). Although HIV co-infection does not affect the success or failure rate of TB treatment (Tessema et al 2009), infection of TB in HIV co-infected patients may accelerate the progression of HIV disease. Previously, a MDR-TB contact study has demonstrated children less than 3 years old, HIV positive, exposed to MDR-TB source and poor socioeconomic factor had higher risk for TB infection (Seddon et al 2013).…”
Section: Risk Factors Of Disease Progressionmentioning
confidence: 99%