Title of article
Unusual sex differences in tuberculosis notifications across Pakistan and the role of environmental factors
Author/Authors
Khan, M.S. University of London - London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK , Khan, M.S. Aga Khan University Hospital, Pakistan , Hasan, R. Aga Khan University - Department of Pathology and Microbiology, Pakistan , Godfrey-Faussett, P. University of London - London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, ايران
From page
821
To page
825
Abstract
In developing countries, only one-third of new tuberculosis cases notified are from women. It is not clear whether tuberculosis incidence is lower in women than men, or whether notification figures reflect under-detection of tuberculosis in women. Pakistan, however, presents an unusual pattern of sex differences in tuberculosis notifications. While 2 of the 4 provinces (Sindh and Punjab) report more notifications from men (female to male ratios 0.81 and 0.89 respectively in 2009), the other 2 provinces (Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan) consistently report higher numbers of smear-positive tuberculosis notifications from women than men (1.37 and 1.40). No other country is known to have such a large variation in the sex ratios of notifications across regions. Large variations in female to male smear-positive notification ratios in different settings across a single country may indicate that environmental factors, rather than endogenous biological factors, are important in influencing the observed sex differences in tuberculosis notifications.
Journal title
Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal
Journal title
Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal
Record number
2643815
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