For health systems implementing tuberculosis control strategies in prisons, cost-effectiveness matters. A new study comparing multiple screening approaches reveals a critical finding: entry and exit screening alone provides 85-94% of the benefits achieved by comprehensive year-round programs, while consuming only 43-67% of the costs.
This insight has important implications for resource-limited settings where budgets constrain TB prevention efforts. Rather than attempting comprehensive twice-yearly screening across all facilities, prison health administrators can achieve substantial population health gains through strategic entry and exit screening using chest X-ray technology with computer-aided detection. The data supports a tiered implementation approach: prioritize robust screening at transition points where incarcerated individuals enter and leave the system. This practical strategy maximizes health impact per dollar spent while reducing operational burden on correctional health services. Prison-based TB screening thus becomes not a luxury intervention, but a fiscally responsible component of public health infrastructure.
Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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