Below is a table of world regions and the TB incident rates from the World Health Sciences website (http://www.worldhealthsciences.com/). The table breaks information into particular world regions and the number and percentage of people exposed to TB.
World Region | Number (in thousands) | % of Global | Total TB Mortality Per 100,000 of Population | |
South East Asia | ||||
Africa | ||||
Western Pacific | ||||
Eastern Mediterranean | ||||
Europe | ||||
The Americas | ||||
Global |
Some of the most infected countries are below.
India
China
Indonesia
South Africa
Brazil
Thailand
Philippines
Happy Friday to you all. Go forth, readers, in good health.
Editor's note: That's a really good point, Dad. As a general statement, though, I would say the numbers having to do with TB in Africa could be more due to the relatively higher HIV/AIDS cases than pretty much all the other countries. According to an article I found on the World Health Organization (WHO) website, by UNAIDS, (http://data.unaids.org/pub/EPISlides/2007/2007_epiupdate_en.pdf) the African Sub-Saharan region is the most seriously affected HIV/AIDS region. This report also shows of some of the top 30 HIV/AIDS infected countries in the world, 22 of those are African countries.
So, while there is high TB numbers in Africa possibly due to HIV/AIDS outbreak, I would say, in my opinion, the rest of the world's numbers come from a high exposure rate due to a prevalence of the TB virus.
2 comments:
Based on the article.. how do you know if these statistics are more indicative of HIV outbreaks as opposed to TB.. since HIV suffers have a compromised immune system specific to TB??
Nice point
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