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TB is
the leading cause of death from infectious disease in developing countries,
and kills 3 million people a year worldwide. In Western Europe and other industrialized countries where TB has become a rare disease, the declining incidence has been halted or reversed. Between 1985 1991, an 18% increase in TB incidence was reported in the USA, and a doubled incidence of TB in New York city. Contributing factors are: a. influx of immigrants from countries with endemic TB, b. increased number of social outcasts living in crowded places, c. AIDS-epidemic, d. emergence of MDR-TB (19% of new TB cases in New York in 1991), and e. dismantling of TB control programs. |