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Saturday, August 27, 2016

Eighty-Two Percent of TB Cases in Nebraska Are Foreign-Born

Only six percent of the 1.9 million residents of the Cornhusker State are foreign-born

Eighty-two percent of the active tuberculosis (TB) cases diagnosed in Nebraska in 2014, that’s 31 out of 38, were foreign-born, according to the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services.

Only six percent of the 1.9 million residents of the Cornhusker State are foreign-born.

2014’s 38 active TB cases represented an 80 percent increase in active TB cases in the state in one year, up from 21 in 2013.

The number of U.S. born cases of active TB in the state actually declined from 8 in 2013 to 7 in 2014. But the number of foreign-born cases of active TB in Nebraska more than doubled in one year, from 13 in 2013, to 31 in 2014. According to the Centers for Disease Control, only 61.9 percent of the active TB cases in 2013, or 13 out of 21, were foreign-born.

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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Since TB was essentially eradicated in the US before the illegals began pouring over the border, you would have to assume that the other 18% of the TB cases (6 cases) are people who were infected by them.

LEGAL immigrants are normally tested prior to entry into the US.