Title: Treating a person instead of a disease
1- Treating a person instead of a disease
- I will remember that there is art to medicine as
well as science, and that warmth, sympathy, and
understanding may outweigh the surgeon's knife or
the chemist's drug. - I will remember that I do not treat a fever
chart, a cancerous growth, but a sick human
being, whose illness may affect the person's
family and economic stability. My responsibility
includes these related problems, if I am to care
adequately for the sick. - -Hippocratic Oath
2Acknowledgments
- Former and Current San Francisco TB Control and
Curry Staff - Gisela Schecter, SF TB Controller 1984-1996
- Max Salfinger, Wadsworth Center, New York State
Department of Health -
-
3Leadership and Tuberculosis Control
- L. Masae Kawamura, M.D.
- Director, TB Control Section
- San Francisco Department of Public Health
- Francis J. Curry National TB Center
4Overview
- Share San Franciscos local experience and
lessons learned - Current challenges to TB control in the U.S.
- Looking within
- Defining success
5SF TB Control
- Mission
- Our mission is to control, prevent and finally
eliminate tuberculosis in San Francisco by
providing compassionate, equitable and supportive
care of the highest quality to all citizens
affected by this disease. - VisionThrough its patient-centered approach,
research, and collaboration with communities, the
San Francisco TB Control Program will remain a
resource of innovation and excellence for other
public health programs.
6Program Description
- Vertical Program
- Centralized TB Clinic with 2 satellite
- treatment/testing sites
- Health worker/DCI model for field DOT and CI
- Team approach to DOT
- Clinicians are UCSF faculty
- Integrated, ongoing training program for
- medical residents and fellows
- Integrated research
- Annual Budget 3.8 million U.S. (53 local,
- 37 federal, 10 state)
7SF TB Control Guiding Principles
- Find and treat all cases to completion
- Stop transmission
- Prevent TB in those at greatest risk of disease
- Emphasis on surveillance, data analysis and the
use of TB program indicators to measure program
performance, target efforts and assess
interventions
8San Francisco TB Control Core Values
- Patient-centered approach
- Patients Come First
- Innovation
- Push the Envelope
- Standards of excellence
- Polish and Refine
-
9SF TB Control Program Built Over Time
- 1900-1950
- TB treatment moved from general wards to
- segregated wards
- Advocacy Local TB Association organized by
- prominent SF physicians
- Holistic approach with the use of social
workers - Early infection control policies established
- (based on observational data)
10SF TB Control Built Over Time
- 1950-1970 TB declines in the era of antibiotics
- Shift from hospital-based to outpatient
treatment - San Francisco outpatient program becomes
- a model for the nation
- Concepts of compassionate, community-
- based accessible TB care pioneered
11TB Cases in San Francisco1970 - 1980
No of cases
12San Francisco TB Control1970s Loss of federal
funds and Southeast Asia political upheaval
- Collapse of South Vietnamese government, rise of
Khmer Rouge led to surges of refugees into SF
1975, 1979-1981 - New hospital built without dedicated TB wards.
TB - Control Clinic becomes outpatient based.
- 1979 rudimentary DOT begins with health
- workers hired from refugee populations
13TB Cases in San Francisco1980 - 1990
No of cases
14San Francisco TB Control1980s Southeast Asian
refugee influx
- Focus on completion of therapy and contact
investigation - - Formal DOT program implemented
- - Modern 6-month short course treatment piloted
- Active case finding (focus on newcomers to US)
- - Refugee TB screening program begins
- - Follow-up on immigrants entering with
- B- notifications
15TB Cases in San Francisco1990 - 2000
No of cases
16San Francisco TB Control 1990s Era of HIV-TB
coinfection, outbreaks, and transmission
- TB Control taken to the streets
- Period of intensification
- Use of DNA fingerprinting
- New screening/treatment site opens near
- TB epicenter
- Demonstration Project Housing for
- homeless patients with comprehensive
- social services
17San Francisco TB Control 1990s Era of HIV-TB
coinfection, outbreaks, and transmission
- Community TB Task Force formed
- 1. Focus on homeless TB transmission
- - Guidelines for shelters and low cost hotels
developed - Contact investigation
- 1. Focus on decreasing the number of cases,
with no contacts through training - 2. Aggressive screening and treatment of HIV
infective contacts
18San Francisco TB Control 1990s Era of HIV-TB
coinfection, outbreaks, and transmission
- Active case finding Focus on HIV and HIV at
risk - -Strict HIV residential screening guidelines
- -Methadone clinics Screening of IDUs
- -Collaboration with UCSF researchers in
- screening HIV homeless individuals
- Aggressive campaign to treat all HIV and TST
- until completion
- -DOPT (directly observed preventive therapy)
19TB Cases in San Francisco 2000 and beyond
No of cases
20San Francisco TB Control2000 and Beyond
Maintain infrastructure, control, retool and
reduce the reservoir of infection
- Update and improve surveillance and patient
management - through new database system and information
technology - Improve community targeted testing and
treatment in high - TB incidence areas and among high-risk
populations - Improve and update contact investigation
- with available tools
- Create and strengthen key community
relationships through - outreach and education
212005 A pivotal year
- Implementation of new relational database
- Implementation of mandatory homeless screening
policy - Implementation of QFT-Gold
- Birth of important relationships in target
communities TARC and Chinese Newcomers Program - New training coordinator (0.1 FTE) Needs
assessment and creation of a strategic plan for
TB education of staff and community
22The Next Five Years Benchmarks
- GO BELOW THE 100 CASE MARK
- Zero cases in shelter system within the next 5
years - DNA clustering rate reduced to 5 percent
- Incorporation of social networking techniques and
DNA fingerprinting in contact investigation - Routine use of blood-based testing for LTBI
diagnosis citywide - Electronic and Website access to all SF TB
Control reports and guidelines - Most highly TB trained staff in the nation
23Strategies
- TARGETED TESTING
- Sharper tools QFT-Gold and beyond
- Target new provider groups who are caring for
populations at risk rheumatology offices,
transplant programs, internists caring for
diabetics, renal dialysis units, etc. - CHINATOWN
- Closer collaboration with Chinese Hospital,
Chinatown health plan and Newcomers Program - Focus on earlier diagnosis of active TB work
with radiologists at Chinese Hospital/St. Francis
and health plan pulmonologist - HOMELESS and HIV TB
- Evaluate TB policies citywide for HIV and
homeless clinics, residential settings, jails and
drug rehab programs. - Develop surveillance system for homeless with
Dept of Human Services - Strengthen collaboration Systematic TB training
of new shelter staff, SROs and homeless providers
24Leadership Lessons from San Francisco
- Centerpiece Patients come first, highest
quality patient-centered care - Credibility commitment to excellence, use of
data, program indicators and self-evaluation - Flexibility and adaptation to technology,
resources and epidemiology - Commitment to maintaining and passing on
expertise mentoring, training and education - All-for-one and one-for-all attitude Sharing,
learning and participating in TB control
activities and organizations at every level
25CHALLENGES TB is a disease of poverty, migration
and ignorance
- Tide pools and stubborn pockets
- TB disparities among minorities
- Difficult to reach urban poor
- New and old immigrants
- Poor control of TB outside of the US
- International travel, immigration, global economy
- Increasing global MDR-TB and drug resistance
262 billion infected!
Active TB incidence, all forms (per 100 000
population per year) 2004Source WHO Stop TB
Department, website www.who.int/tb
27Active TB Case Rates, United States, 2005
D.C.
15 million infected!
3.64.8
4.8 (national average)
Cases per 100,000.
28Reported TB Cases United States, 19822005
No. of Cases
Year
Updated as of March 29, 2006
29Number of TB Cases inU.S.-born vs. Foreign-born
Persons United States, 19932005
No. of Cases
Updated as of March 29, 2006.
30Completion of TB Therapy United States,
19932003
Percentage
Updated as of March 29, 2006. Healthy People
2010 target 90 completed in 1 yr or less. Note
Persons with initial isolate resistant to
rifampin and children under 15 years old with
meningeal, bone or joint, or miliary disease
excluded.
31TB Control success
- US TB control programs are experts on effective
behavioral strategies to improve adherence and
patient/provider relations - Patient centered DOT
- National reporting and surveillance system
- National guidelines have standardized care
- National program for training, education and
medical consultation (RTMCCs) - Communication and advocacy national, state and
regional TB controller organizations
32Coalition Leadership is better than going it alone
- Local Taskforce
- Regional State and regional TB organizations
- National NTCA, ACET
- Teaming up of minds leadership to tackle local,
regional and national issues
33US TB incidence is at an all time low but take a
closer look
- FB cases essentially unchanged (24 Mexican-born)
- US born cases are dominated by African Americans
and minorities - Case rates in inner cities and in poor
communities in the SE US are as high as rates in
developing countries - Outbreaks continue all over the US despite
contact tracing - Imported MDR and XDR continues and can expect to
worsen
34We have done so much but it is not enough
- Long way to go in engaging patients, providers,
communities and society - undocumented persons, hidden HIV and those living
on both sides of the US-Mexico border - Minority communities
- New and old immigrants
- Making targeted testing and LTBI treatment a
primary care issue - Improving adherence to LTBI treatment beyond
traditional approaches of education, incentives
and enablers
35Whats left to do?
- Continue to use what works
- Move ahead implement available technology to
eliminate old problems such as treatment in the
dark and poor specificity and return rates of
the TB skin test - Develop new drugs and a vaccine
- Push for policies that decrease health
disparities - Address global TB and importation of active
disease and LTBI -
36MDR-TB Global RatesZignol, Dye et al, JID
2006194
- 2004 estimates 424,203 (4.3)
- 2002 estimates 272,906 (1.1)
- Estimated 43 of global MDR-TB cases have had
prior treatment - China, India and Russian Federation accounts for
62 of the MDR burden - China 5.3 of new cases (27.2 previously
treated)
372006 Global Distribution of MDR-TB among
previously treated cases Source Zignol, Dye et
al, JID 2006194
38Cost of MDR-TB
- Average US range 89,594 (survivor)717,555
(died), Rajbandary et al, IUATLD,Vol.88,
1012-1016(5) 2004 - Treatment is long, difficult and toxic
- Long periods of isolation (sometimes lifelong)
- Higher rate of death
- May be incurable
- Higher rate of depression
39Preventing drug resistant tuberculosis
- Turning off the tap Drug susceptibility testing
(DST), proper treatment/ case management, and
ensuring adherence - Short term Implementation of rapid DST, new drug
development. - Long term Development of a vaccine
40Delay in susceptibility testing will lead to
treatment failure
- Shortening turnaround times for identification,
and susceptibility testing should be a priority - Molecular beacons, line-probe assays, strip
tests Technology that currently exists with a
TAT of - CDC recommends that the TAT for growth detection,
identification and susceptibility testing of the
M.tb should be available within 2-4 weeks after
receiving the specimen
ASPHLD-CDC 1995 Styrt et al. JCM 1997
41Microscopy - LJ - Broth-based
Detection Identification Drug resistance Genotypin
g
Molecular
42Diagnosis of tuberculosis infection
QuantiFERON Blood Test (QFT)
TB Skin Test (TST)
43Targeted testing and LTBI treatment Laser vs.
flashlight
- Shift of LTBI diagnosis from clinic to lab with
new blood-based tests for TB - QFT-G is highly specific and eliminates false
positives from BCG, atypical mycobacteria and
lack of technical skills needed to perform the
mantoux test - QFT-G has many operational advantages over TST
- May be ultimately cheaper and safer for the
public by preventing unneeded CXRs, clinic
visits, and treatment
44A good leader takes action
- Sometimes the only things seen are the road
blocks and not the road ahead. What remains now
is making sure there is a road to follow.
45One of the problems
-
- The absence of adverse public health events is
the most commonly taken-for-granted outcome of
our successful work. -
- Kenneth Castro
- Director, DTBE, CDC
- April 4, 2006
46Apathy and ignorance
- Lack of interest, apathy, competing interests
- If TB doesnt affect the middle class and rich
personally who cares!
47The Competition and hype
- Flavor-of-the-month diseases Bird Flu, SARS,
West Nile, Lyme disease - Transform the competition into opportunities to
- Promote the importance of public health
- Compare quoted statistics to TB
48The Competition . (2)
- Terrorism and the war in Iraq
- Transform the competition into opportunities
- Public health warriors
- Compare quoted mortality statistics to US deaths
from TB and HIV and lives saved from TB and HIV
treatment
49Fear of change
- Decreasing resources, rising costs
- Old tools despite available new technology
- Perceived threat of program dollars diverted to
research
50Decreasing resources and rising costs
- Caution Fear often causes finger pointing and
face-offs between local, state and federal
programs as well as academic and public health,
SPEAK WITH ONE VOICE TO UPHOLD PRINCIPLES, and
JUSTIFY THE RESOURCES YOU HAVE with data - Be creative, smart, and develop policies that
promote TB control - Use data to fight your battles locally and
statewide - Have a vision, goals and plan
51Conclusions
- Success in TB control must be achieved for the
sake of the - public and the global community
- Our leadership locally, regionally and
internationally must be - based on sound public health principles,
clinical expertise - and equitable, patient-centered care
- During this period of declining resources, we
must avoid - being divisive within the TB Control community
and stand - together with one voice to demand what is
needed - We must make our voices heard by advocating for
our - patients, our frontline staff and public
health - Sharing our expertise through international
technical - assistance will be critical in the fight
against global - TB, HIV-related TB and rising drug resistance
52Success depends on each and every one of us
- Success cannot be defined as eliminating TB alone
- Success is curing one patient at a time and
preventing future cases - Successful leadership can be determined by the
way we mentor others to the very essence of
public health recognizing health as a basic
human right while caring for individuals,
communities and populations -
-
53- Your stand against TB is a stand against poverty,
inequity and injustice. -
-