Utility of the Hospital Tuberculosis Registry
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology
- Vol. 15 (8) , 536-539
- https://doi.org/10.2307/30148405
Abstract
Emerging guidelines suggest that the management of tuberculosis and suspected tuberculosis in the hospital will become an increasingly costly enterprise. The local hospital registry can be a focal point for determining the extent to which such measures are necessary at individual institutions, that existing infection control recommendations are being carried out, and that patients released from the hospital are not lost to follow-up. Consideration might be given to inclusion of all patients begun on antituberculous therapy, regardless of the results of acid-fast bacilli cultures, in view of renewed concern about patient compliance.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tuberculosis, again.American Journal of Public Health, 1993
- The Emergence of Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis in New York CityNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Medical Section of the American Lung Association: Control of Tuberculosis in the United StatesAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1992
- Resurgent Nosocomial Tuberculosis: Consequences and Actions for Hospital EpidemiologistsInfection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, 1992
- Hospital Outbreak of Multidrug-Resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis InfectionsJAMA, 1992
- Tuberculosis in the United States: Looking for a Silver Lining among the CloudsAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1992
- Multidrug-resistant TuberculosisAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1992
- The New TuberculosisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992
- The U-shaped Curve of ConcernAmerican Review of Respiratory Disease, 1991
- A year's experience with tuberculosis in a private urban teaching hospital in the postsanatorium eraThe American Journal of Medicine, 1975