Modern History of Tuberculosis in Korea
Jae–Hoon Song, Kyungmin Huh, Doo Ryeon Chung
Infection and Chemotherapy · 2019-01
Abstract
Tuberculosis has been a major public health threat in modern Korea. A few reports from the mid-1940s have demonstrated a high prevalence of latent and active tuberculosis infections. The high disease burden urged the newly established government to place a high priority on tuberculosis control. The government led a nationwide effort to control tuberculosis by building dedicated hospitals, conducting mass screening, providing technical and material support for microbiological diagnosis, administering Bacillus Calmette-Guérin vaccination, and improving appropriate antibiotic treatment through public health centers. Such concerted efforts resulted in a gradual decrease in the disease burden of tuberculosis, as demonstrated by National Tuberculosis Prevalence Surveys and notifiable disease statistics. While great progress has been made, new challenges - including an aging population, outbreaks in schools and healthcare facilities, and migration from high-prevalence countries - lie ahead. Here, we review the modern history of tuberculosis in Korea, focusing on epidemiology and public health policies.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Tuberculosis
- Public health
- Epidemiology
- Environmental health
- Government (linguistics)
- Disease
- Communicable disease
- Health care
- Disease burden
- Vaccination policy
- Outbreak
- Population