Historical declines in tuberculosis: nature, nurture and the biosocial model
- PMID: 11326817
Historical declines in tuberculosis: nature, nurture and the biosocial model
Abstract
The large declines in the incidence of tuberculosis over time in the industrially developed nations have usually been attributed to natural selection or to socio-economic improvements. Both explanations are beset with problems, as there is little firm evidence for the occurrence of natural selection of resistance to tuberculosis to any significant extent, and doubts have been expressed as to whether the incidence of a disease can be directly related to measures of socio-economic change without consideration of the impact of the many specific public health measures that have been taken. In addition, analyses of the changing prevalence of tuberculosis must consider the impact of changing environmental and ecological factors that affect, for example, the immunising effect of exposure to Mycobacterium bovis and saprophytic mycobacteria. It is also necessary to determine whether the causative organism is undergoing evolutionary change, as recent reports suggest.
Comment in
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Historical declines in tuberculosis: nature, nurture and the biosocial model.Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2001 Sep;5(9):879. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2001. PMID: 11573903 No abstract available.
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