A review of tuberculosis at the wildlife-livestock-human interface in Zambia

Type Journal Article - Infectious diseases of poverty
Title A review of tuberculosis at the wildlife-livestock-human interface in Zambia
Author(s)
Volume 2
Issue 13
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
URL http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/2049-9957-2-13.pdf
Abstract
Zambia’s estimated incidence of all forms of human tuberculosis (TB) is 707/100,000. High prevalence of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) – infection with Mycobacterium bovis – in cattle and the Kafue lechwe antelopes (Kobus leche Kafuensis) has been reported in the Kafue basin. Consumption of unpasteurised milk and meat products from infected animals poses a risk of transmitting zoonotic tuberculosis to people living at the human-animal interface. Despite the reported high prevalence of BTB in both livestock and wildlife, information on the proportion of human patients infected with M. bovis is unknown in Zambia. This paper reviews the available information in English on human, livestock and wildlife TB in Zambia with the purpose of assessing the burden of animal infections with M. tuberculosis complex and its public health implications.

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