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dc.contributor.authorPio, Aes_ES
dc.contributor.authorWestern, Kes_ES
dc.date.accessioned2016
dc.date.available2016
dc.date.issued1976es_ES
dc.identifier.urihttps://iris.paho.org/handle/10665.2/27657
dc.description.abstractTuberculosi remains a serious public health problem in the Americas, and it has not declined as rapidly or as much as experts projected it would in the 1940's. Scientific advances in control of the disease over the last three decades have produced effective chemotherapeutic agents, established the immunizing capacity of BCG vaccine, and demonstrated the superior value of bacteriologic diagnosis in symptomatic individuals over mass community x-ray surveys, which are both inefficient and costly. They have also shown that most cases can be treated on an ambulatory basis, obviating the need for the lengthy hospital stays which have heretofore weighed so heavily on budgets. By standardization of control methods, both for diagnosis and for chemotherapy, these tasks can be taken on by polyvalent staff in the general health services, whose wide coverage places them in a position to reach a much larger segment of the population than that attended by the traditional vertical system. To a greater or lesser degree, all the countries in the Americas are beginning to orient their strategies in this direction, and some of them already have considerable progress to report (Au)en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesBulletin of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO);10(3),1976en_US
dc.subjectTuberculosises_ES
dc.subjectLatin Americaes_ES
dc.subjectNorth Americaes_ES
dc.titleTuberculosis control in the Americas: current approachesen_US
dc.typeJournal articlesen_US
dc.rights.holderPan American Health Organizationen_US


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