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‘Small number’ of TB cases at Chicago migrant shelters

Chicago health officials have confirmed a small number of positive TB cases at a few different migrant shelters. The cases come as the city continues to deal with an outbreak of measles. A small number of tuberculosis cases have been found at several Chicago migrant shelters, according to city health officials. The cases add to an ongoing outbreak of measles experienced by new arrivals in the city. The health department confirmed that an estimated 10-20% of South and Central America have latent TB infection, which is not transmissible but results in a positive TB test. The city's Department of Public Health assigns a nurse case manager to individuals with active cases of tuberculosis and performs a contact tracing investigation. As of Thursday, there have been 56 measles cases reported in Chicago, including three cases this week. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention remains in Chicago to assist with the measles cases and is investigating the source of measles.

‘Small number’ of TB cases at Chicago migrant shelters

Опубликовано : месяц назад от Jeff Arnold в Health

(NewsNation) — A “small number” of tuberculosis cases have been found at several Chicago migrant shelters, city health officials confirmed Thursday, adding to the outbreak of measles being experienced by new arrivals in the city.

A health department spokesman said that the agency became aware of the small number of tuberculosis cases in a “few different shelters”. The city said that an estimated 10-20% of residents of South and Central America have latent TB infection, the health department said in a statement released on Wednesday.

The infection is asymptomatic and is not transmissible to others, but it does result in a positive TB test, the statement said.

For those who do have active cases of tuberculosis, the Chicago Department of Public Health assigns a nurse case manager to each individual and performs a contact tracing investigation, spokesman Jacob Martin said.

Martin did not immediately return an email to NewsNation on Thursday seeking information about how many cases have been confirmed and what how many migrant shelters in Chicago are affected.

Tuberculosis is curable with antibiotics and is not particularly infectious, but typically requires several hours or more of prolonged close contact between individuals to spread. CDPH continues to take cases seriously to keep it contained.

As of Thursday, the city health department has not confirmed any reports of tuberculosis that resulted from exposure to someone inside one of the affected migrant shelters, the health department said.

Tuberculosis is not a novel or rarely seen illness in Chicago, health officials said, and the city health department typically expects to see between 100-150 cases of tuberculosis in Chicago residents in an average year.

The tuberculosis cases come as the city continues to see an increased number of confirmed measles cases, the majority of which are linked to Chicago’s largest migrant shelter. As of Thursday, there have been 56 measles cases reported in Chicago, including three cases this week.

A team from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention remains in Chicago to assist with the handling of the measles cases and is still investigating the source of how measles arrived in the city. Mayor Brandon Johnson and city health officials have said that migrants being housed in city-run shelters did not bring the virus to the city.

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