San Antonio Express-News

Amid pandemic, state’s efforts to control TB slipped

- By Colleen Deguzman

Narciso Lopez has spent more than two decades working to control the spread of tuberculos­is in South Texas. He used to think that when patient traffic into the clinics where he worked was slow, that meant the surroundin­g community was healthy. But when the COVID-19 pandemic hit in early 2020, that changed.

“I would be getting maybe three to four a month,” recalled Lopez, a TB program supervisor with Cameron County’s health department.

In a matter of months, patients seeking care at the county’s two clinics dropped by half. “And then I wasn’t getting any at all,” he said.

As COVID-19 gripped the world’s attention, Lopez began to focus on a parallel concern: whether TB was being overlooked along the Texas-mexico border.

“I knew there had to be TB cases out there; they just weren’t being found,” Lopez said in a recent interview.

Before 2020, advances to eradicate TB, which is spread personto-person through the air, were underway globally. It was considered by many public health experts to be a feasible goal since tools are available to identify and treat it. But the prevalence of the disease in Mexico, and immigratio­n along the border, has made it a longtime health concern in these communitie­s.

In areas with high immigrant traffic, such as Cameron County, TB is a serious health concern. Cameron sits at the southernmo­st tip of Texas, and each year millions of people cross to and from Mexico at the four border crossings in the Brownsvill­e region. Brownsvill­e is the county’s seat and largest city. In 2019, before COVID-19, Texas’ 32 border counties had an average TB incidence of 8.4 cases per 100,000 people — more than double that of the state overall, and nearly triple the national rate.

Since the pandemic began, though, some tuberculos­is clinics in border areas have been performing fewer tests, receiving fewer referrals from local hospitals and providers, and treating fewer patients. Lopez and others who do this public health work every day on the ground agree it’s not likely less TB is circulatin­g. Instead, they say, COVID-19 testing and treatment have claimed so much attention and energy that TB has been pushed off the radar, threatenin­g to reverse decades of progress in eliminatin­g it.

Lopez said his county’s tuber

culosis department usually gets around 40 to 60 patients a year. “And then, all of a sudden, we went down to 20 during the COVID pandemic,” he said.

The numbers seem to be bouncing back. In 2022, Lopez said, the county’s clinics saw 35 TB patients. But that’s still lower than pre-pandemic levels.

Hidalgo County, which neighbors Cameron to the west, experience­d a similar trend in 2020, when its number of confirmed TB cases was cut in half from the previous year, dropping from 71 cases to 36, according to Jeanne Salinas, tuberculos­is program manager of the county health department. The county also performed hundreds fewer TB tests.

Since 2020, Salinas said, tuberculos­is has been “overlooked” as a diagnosis for patients reporting “prolonged

cough or cough with blood, losing weight, having fevers.” After COVID-19 became everyone’s overriding concern, these patients — who included new immigrants as well as people who regularly traveled across the border for work or to visit family on the other side — were tested for COVID. Salinas said it was only if the symptoms persisted that patients would perhaps be evaluated for tuberculos­is. This lag time allowed the illness to progress in individual patients and potentiall­y spread in the community.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. tuberculos­is incidence rates “decreased steadily” from 1993 to 2019. In 2020, though, there was a “sharp” decline of nearly 20 percent in recorded cases, which the CDC materials suggest may be due to “delayed or missed TB diagnoses or a true reduction in TB incidence related to pandemic mitigation efforts and changes in immigratio­n

and travel.” But because TB is more contagious than COVID-19 (its particles stay in the air longer), steps like masking and distancing are less effective. So, Salinas argues the former is more likely.

Convincing people of the need to test for TB was difficult even before COVID-19, Lopez said. For starters, some health workers wrongly considered the illness a nonissue. That tuberculos­is and COVID-19 share similar symptoms became another complicati­on. When doctors and other health profession­als saw those symptoms, their first concern was COVID-19. And for a while, it was their only concern.

Other issues are diagnosis and treatment. Samples for COVID-19 rapid tests, and even the more sensitive and expensive PCR tests, can be collected with a simple nasal swab. TB screening is more invasive, done with either a skin test that requires a follow-up visit to a health profession­al or a blood draw that is tested in a lab.

Though TB is a curable disease, its treatment can require up to a year of prescribed antibiotic­s, which experts say adds to the urgency of detecting cases early on.

The Texas Department of State Health Services says on its website that tuberculos­is rates are “higher along the Texasmexic­o border” than in the rest of the state. Dr. Armando Meza, chief of infectious diseases at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center in El Paso, said that’s because “almost all cases of tuberculos­is in the United States are coming from immigrants.”

Dr. Linda Villarreal, a former Texas Medical Associatio­n president who is a member of the group’s Border Health Caucus, added that many people live in Mexico but work in Texas, and vice versa, “so with that comes perhaps unclear health issues and exposure.”

 ?? Josie Norris/staff photograph­er ?? Elizabeth Reyes, 30, of Houston is shown in her former patient room at the Texas Center for Infectious Disease in San Antonio. Reyes was diagnosed with tuberculos­is in late 2020. Some public health workers worry that responding to COVID-19 has taken attention away from tuberculos­is.
Josie Norris/staff photograph­er Elizabeth Reyes, 30, of Houston is shown in her former patient room at the Texas Center for Infectious Disease in San Antonio. Reyes was diagnosed with tuberculos­is in late 2020. Some public health workers worry that responding to COVID-19 has taken attention away from tuberculos­is.

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