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WSWS : News
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America
Tuberculosis on the rise in the Washington DC area
By Kate Randall
22 March 2001
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The rate of tuberculosis infection is increasing in the Washington
DC area, according to figures for the year 2000 from the US Centers
for Disease Control. The number of TB cases in Washington rose
by 21 percent over 1999 rates and in Northern Virginia the number
was up 5 percent.
These figures are indicative of the further growth of social
inequality in the DC area. Washington is home to some of the most
wealthy politicians, media figures and their hangers-on. Corporate
sponsors doled out more than $40 million to pay for the inaugural
festivities for George W. Bush last January. But only blocks from
the White House and the Capitol are some of the most devastated
neighborhoods in the country, where working class and poor residents
face record levels of poverty, infant mortality and HIV infection.
Added to this now is an increase of tuberculosis, a disease which
has been on the decline in most parts of the United States for
decades.
Tuberculosis is a bacterial disease that attacks the lungs.
It is the top infectious disease in the world and has been on
the rise worldwide in recent years. In the US, however, rates
of infection have been steadily dropping since the 1950s. TB cases
were down 6.6 percent last year from 1999. But among newly arrived
immigrants the disease has been on the increase. The growth of
TB cases in the DC area has been attributed to the influx of immigrants
in recent years from African, Southeast Asian and Latin American
countries.
Venkatarama Koppaka Rao, director of the tuberculosis control
division at the Virginia Department of Health, commented, TB
has always been a disease of the disenfranchised. Rao was
speaking Tuesday at a TB conference in Fairfax County in Northern
Virginia. People living in poverty are often forced to live
in close quarters, he said, facilitating transmission of
the bacteria that carries the disease.
Across Virginia, there were 292 active cases of tuberculosis
reported last year, a 12.6 percent drop from 1999, the lowest
ever recorded number. However in Northern Virginia counties there
were 149 reported cases, more than half the state's total, and
89 of these were in Fairfax County. Foreign-born residents accounted
for 92 percent of the county's total number of cases. While the
county's population has increased in this same period, the rate
of TB infection has surpassed that growth. In Washington DC there
were 85 reported cases of TB last year, up from 70 in 1999.
Health officials attribute some of the increase to undocumented
immigrants entering the area, who undergo no health checks. However,
the TB screening of legal immigrants may itself be inadequate
because it usually does not detect inactive TB bacteria. One third
of the world's population, or about 1.7 billion people, are carriers
of the bacteria that causes TB, but only a very small fraction
of these individuals develop active tuberculosis.
See Also:
UN report on Eastern
Europe and the former USSR
The 'free market's' social catastrophe
[5 August 1999]
Washington inaugural celebrations:
corporate America welcomes Bush
[20 January 2001]
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