TY - JOUR KW - Adolescent KW - Adult KW - Age Distribution KW - Aged KW - China KW - Ethnic Groups KW - Female KW - Health Services Accessibility KW - Health Surveys KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Male KW - Middle Aged KW - Retrospective Studies KW - Sex Distribution KW - Socioeconomic Factors KW - Time Factors AU - Chen X S AU - Li W Z AU - Jiang C AU - Ye G Y AB -

In a national survey in China, 27,928 cases of leprosy detected by the health authorities between 1984 and 1998 were investigated. The delay between onset of symptoms (estimated from each case's recall) and confirmed diagnosis was < or = 2 years for 55.1% of the new patients but > 10 years for 7.0%, with a median value, overall, of 22.0 months. The median delay was longer: (1) for the multibacillary cases than the paucibacillary; (2) among farmers than among factory workers; (3) among some nationalities than among others (being longest among the Tu and shortest among the Wei); and (4) for some methods of case-detection than for others. Over the study period, the mean delay decreased with time. The delay was greatest in the areas where leprosy was endemic and/or where access to health services was poor. The later the cases were detected the more likely they were to show disability. Leprosy cases are still going undetected in China, although, over the last 14 years, case-finding has significantly improved. Age, occupation, nationality, leprosy type and detection method all appear to affect the delay.

BT - Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10827873?dopt=Abstract CN - CHEN2000B DA - 2000 Mar DO - 10.1080/00034980057527 IS - 2 J2 - Ann Trop Med Parasitol LA - eng N2 -

In a national survey in China, 27,928 cases of leprosy detected by the health authorities between 1984 and 1998 were investigated. The delay between onset of symptoms (estimated from each case's recall) and confirmed diagnosis was < or = 2 years for 55.1% of the new patients but > 10 years for 7.0%, with a median value, overall, of 22.0 months. The median delay was longer: (1) for the multibacillary cases than the paucibacillary; (2) among farmers than among factory workers; (3) among some nationalities than among others (being longest among the Tu and shortest among the Wei); and (4) for some methods of case-detection than for others. Over the study period, the mean delay decreased with time. The delay was greatest in the areas where leprosy was endemic and/or where access to health services was poor. The later the cases were detected the more likely they were to show disability. Leprosy cases are still going undetected in China, although, over the last 14 years, case-finding has significantly improved. Age, occupation, nationality, leprosy type and detection method all appear to affect the delay.

PY - 2000 SP - 181 EP - 8 T2 - Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology TI - Leprosy in China: delay in the detection of cases. VL - 94 SN - 0003-4983 ER -