Rieder H L
Division of Tuberculosis Control, Centers for Disease Control.
Public Health Rep. 1989 Nov-Dec;104(6):653-7.
Paleopathologic findings provide strong evidence for the existence of tuberculosis in Andean populations of pre-Columbian America. Indirect evidence is available also to suggest its possible endemicity among some American Indian tribes who lived within the present-day contiguous United States before the arrival of Europeans. The available data suggest that tuberculosis became a major health problem in some tribes with increased population density and cultural changes after increased contact with European civilization, paralleling the deterioration in living conditions after relocation of the tribes to reservations. By 1900, tuberculosis had become one of the most serious health problems among North American Indians. Tuberculosis control was hampered by the lack of a specific treatment, and only the advent of specific chemotherapy in an ambulatory setting brought a breakthrough. Mortality, morbidity, and risk of infection have all sharply decreased over the past three decades. However, tuberculosis incidence rates among American Indians remain well above rates in the white population. An intensified effort to identify those with tuberculosis and those at risk of tuberculosis as well as to develop compliance-enhancing strategies with treatment regimens will be necessary to eliminate tuberculosis from Indian reservations.
古病理学研究结果为哥伦布发现美洲大陆之前安第斯人群中存在结核病提供了有力证据。也有间接证据表明,在欧洲人到来之前生活在当今美国本土相邻地区的一些美洲印第安部落中,结核病可能呈地方性流行。现有数据表明,随着人口密度增加以及与欧洲文明接触增多后文化发生变化,结核病在一些部落中成为主要的健康问题,这与部落迁至保留地后生活条件恶化情况类似。到1900年,结核病已成为北美印第安人中最严重的健康问题之一。由于缺乏特效治疗方法,结核病控制工作受到阻碍,只有在门诊环境中出现特效化疗才带来了突破。在过去三十年里,死亡率、发病率和感染风险均大幅下降。然而,美洲印第安人的结核病发病率仍远高于白人人口。为了在印第安保留地消除结核病,有必要加大力度识别结核病患者和结核病高危人群,并制定提高治疗方案依从性的策略。