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INFORMATION ON HEALTH AND MIGRATION

  • Author: Ricardo Alexandre Arcêncio1 *, Thaı´s Zamboni Berra1 , Nahari de Faria Marcos TerenaID2 , Matheus Piumbini Rocha3 , Tatiana Ferraz de Arau´jo Alecrim4 , Fernanda Miye de Souza Kihara3 , Keila Cristina MascarelloID5 , Carolina Maia Martins Sales3 , Ethel Leonor Noia Maciel3
  • Publication Date: June 9, 2021

spatial clusteringTuberculosis (TB) in migrants is of concern to health authorities worldwide and is even more critical in Brazil, considering the country´s size and long land borders. The aim of the study was to identify critical areas in Brazil for migrants diagnosed with TB and to describe the temporal trend in this phenomenon in recent years. 2,471 TB cases were reported in migrants. Gi* analysis showed that areas with spatial association with TB in immigrants coincide with critical areas for TB in the general population (coast of the Southeast and North regions). Four TB clusters were identified in immigrants in the states of Amazonas, Roraima, São Paulo, and Rio de Janeiro, with an upward trend in most of these clusters. The temporal trend in TB in immigrants was classified as increasing in Brazil (+ 60.66% per year [95% CI: 27.21-91.85]) and in the clusters in the states of Amazonas, Roraima, and Rio de Janeiro (+1.01, +2.15, and + 2.90% per year, respectively). The cluster in the state of São Paulo was the only one classified as stationary. The descriptive data on the municipalities belonging to the clusters showed evidence of the association between TB incidence and conditions of social vulnerability.

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