The Phnom Penh Post

TB diagnoses lag: study

- Erin Handley

ALACK of diagnostic equipment in Cambodia is causing cases of tuberculos­is to be both over- and under-reported in children, a new study finds.

The study, published in online peer-reviewed journal BioMed Central Public Health, found the “availabili­ty of advanced diagnostic tools was low”.

“Only 27.5% of clinicians had Xpert machines available at their facility, and 5% had equipment to perform gastric aspiration,” the study reads.

But even when equipment was available, it wasn’t always used effectivel­y.

While more than 77 percent of 40 clinicians interviewe­d said they had a chest X-ray at their health care centre, less than 35 percent of 104 parents reported that an X-ray examinatio­n was conducted on their child.

The limited availabili­ty of these tools, and “suboptimal clinician performanc­e”, highlighte­d that more resources should be allocated to improve diagnoses of tuberculos­is cases “which are likely being missed”, the report concluded.

Dr Mao Tan Eang, director of the National Centre for Tuberculos­is and Leprosy Control, said while lack of equipment was a persistent problem, training in screening – not necessar- ily diagnosis – was widespread.

“In terms of diagnosing children, it’s quite complicate­d. We have trained some, but they need to be further refreshed in terms of diagnosis as well as [screening] training,” he said, adding diagnosis can only be done at the hospital level, not at the health-centre level.

He doubted there was much “over-diagnosis”, saying they identify 6,000-7,000 cases of tuberculos­is per year.

Ministry of Health spokesman Ly Sovann described the situation as “very difficult” and said the government was trying to “reduce the prevalence of tuberculos­is”, but did not elaborate on funding questions.

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A patient and a family member sit on a bed at the National Center for Tuberculos­is and Leprosy Control in Phnom Penh’s Chamkarmon district.
HENG CHIVOAN A patient and a family member sit on a bed at the National Center for Tuberculos­is and Leprosy Control in Phnom Penh’s Chamkarmon district.

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