TB case found
at Peacehaven Bedok Day Centre
SINGAPORE: A case of tuberculosis (TB) was discovered at
Peacehaven Bedok Day Centre in late June, the Ministry of Health
(MOH) said on Friday (Aug 19).
In response to queries, MOH said both the ministry and the
Tuberculosis Control Unit (TBCU) were notified of the TB case on
Jun 26, and that the patient is now undergoing treatment for
TB.
The centre's executive director, Mdm Low Mui Lang, said in a
statement that the resident was segregated after she started
coughing. "She was then admitted to hospital and was diagnosed with
tuberculosis," she said, adding that the resident is no longer
infectious.
MOH added that TBCU initiated contact tracing, and all who were
in close contact with the patient have been screened.
"36 residents and staff at Peacehaven Bedok Day Centre who were
close contacts were screened, and no cases of active TB were
found," MOH said.
Mdm Low said a few clients and staff members were diagnosed with
latent TB, and are taking medication "as a form of
prevention".
MOH said TBCU is following up with patients who were diagnosed
with latent TB for treatment and monitoring, adding that these
cases may not be linked to the active case diagnosed in June this
year, as people who have been exposed to the disease may develop
latent TB infection (LTBI).
MOH added that TB is endemic in Singapore, and those who have
latent TB do not have symptoms of the disease such as cough, and
are not infectious. "In most healthy adults with LTBI, the TB
bacteria remain inactive in their body throughout their life," MOH
said.
The centre has also stepped up its infection control measures to
prevent further contamination, Mdm Low added.
This comes after a cluster of six multi-drug resistant TB
infections were found at a block of flats in Ang Mo Kio that was
reported in June this year. The six individuals came from four
separate units at Block 203 Ang Mo Kio Avenue 3, and their ages
ranged from early 20s to 70 years old.
Upon this discovery, health authorities offered free TB
screenings to the block's residents. A total of 223 residents and
former residents were screened. Of these, 164 tested negative for
TB, while 45 residents could have latent TB. Two residents of the
block could have active TB, MOH said in early July, and authorities
said the cases were being followed up on for treatment, monitoring
and contact tracing.
- CNA/dl