Tuberculosis case confirmed at Jasper High School
Source: WBRC 6 News
Jasper City Schools is working with the Alabama Department of Public Health after a tuberculosis case was confirmed in a student at Jasper High School, officials announced Friday.
Superintendent Dr. Ann Jackson said the district was notified of the case late Thursday. Administrators say they quickly coordinated with state health officials to identify close contacts, notify faculty and staff, and prepare letters for students and families.
Health officials emphasized Jasper High School students, staff, and other close contacts are no longer at risk of exposure from the identified case. The school system says it was informed tuberculosis is rarely spread in a school setting.
Free testing will be offered to students and staff considered close contacts, and permission forms for testing were sent home Friday, Jackson said. The high school has also been sanitized with hospital-grade cleaning products.
Read more: https://www.wbrc.com/2025/09/27/tuberculosis-case-confirmed-jasper-high-school/

intrepidity
(8,467 posts)Irish_Dem
(75,303 posts)Igel
(37,122 posts)Other countries, from many of which we've had a recent surge in immigration, have higher incidence rates, esp. among the urban and rural poor who have worse living conditions prior to immigration, worse living conditions than many Americans after immigration, and less access to health care, whether in the US or their countries of origin. Very often immigrants will go back to visit family/friends/etc. in their home countries for a while and pick it up, or new arrivals will spread it.
Incidence in the US has risen since the big groundswell of immigration started in what, 2019, and it's not a Trump/Biden "thing". Not a huge rate increase, but noticeable enough for the CDC to take note.
https://www.cdc.gov/tb-surveillance-report-2023/summary/national.html
And it's not just Alabama.
A nearby school district reported two cases recently--notice that they're siblings, TBs most easily spread from close, not casual, contact.
In 2021, Houston's incidence rate was the same as New York City's and lower than San Francisco, San Diego, and Los Angeles', so don't bother with the "yeah, that's backwards Texas." Unless you follow it up with "and backwards New York City and San Francisco and Los Angeles". Just sayin'.
The only person I've ever known with TB was in the late '70s or early '80s, and he was Mexican by citizenship. He was sick and had missed work intermittently for a while. Finally the disease was IDed, he was quarantined and we all had to have tuberculin skin tests. No idea how long he'd been infected--at least a month or so, given his sick days--but the dozen people that were his coworkers all tested negative, myself included. Then again, we worked for a small company in a large warehouse, not a confined office, and we had to pull the components for the kits we assembled, assemble them, shrink wrap the kits and then box them up for shipment.
I wouldn't be surprised if tuberculin skin tests weren't required at some point for public school students in some areas--there'd be an outcry, but I remember them every once in a while when I was a public school student back in the '60s and early-ish '70s. It's one of the ways "we" brought down the incidence rate decades ago.
Skittles
(167,707 posts)it left a scar on her lung
Bernardo de La Paz
(58,798 posts)mercuryblues
(15,878 posts)leeches?
Be Leave On
(327 posts)sheshe2
(93,990 posts)However this from CDC
CDC
Tuberculosis (TB) germs spread through the air from one person to another.
TB germs can get into the air when someone with active TB disease coughs, speaks, or sings.
People nearby may breathe in these germs and become infected.
People with inactive TB, also called latent TB infection, cannot spread TB germs to others.
Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by a bacterium (or germ) called Mycobacterium tuberculosis. When a person breathes in TB germs, the germs can settle in the lungs and begin to grow. From there, they can move through the blood to other parts of the body, such as the kidney, spine, and brain.
TB bacteria can live in the body without making you sick. This is called inactive TB, or latent TB infection. People with inactive TB are infected with TB germs, but they do not have active TB disease. They do not feel sick, do not have symptoms of TB disease, and cannot spread TB germs to others.
Without treatment, people with inactive TB can develop active TB disease at any time and become sick.
https://www.cdc.gov/tb/causes/index.html
CountAllVotes
(21,967 posts)The reason I am alone is because most of my family died from T.B.
It is a curse of an illness.
sheshe2
(93,990 posts)
CountAllVotes
(21,967 posts)My entire family is buried near San Francisco.
My great grandfather died in 1929. His mother and 3 of his siblings died from T.B.
I never knew what happened to all of them and then I found out it was T.B. The most recent death was in the 1940s.
UpInArms
(53,436 posts)On a broken escalator
republianmushroom
(21,468 posts)progressoid
(51,995 posts)