By Cassie N. Saunders, County of San Diego Communications OfficeJan. 31, 2025 | 9:46 AM Reading Time: 2 minutes
The County’s Tuberculosis Control Program is working in close collaboration with the Sweetwater Union High School District to notify students, employees, and contractors potentially exposed to tuberculosis (TB) at Palomar High School during the 2023-2024 school year.
The school is located at 480 Palomar St, Chula Vista, CA 91911. The dates of potential exposure are from Feb. 24 to June 5, 2024. The diagnosis of tuberculosis can be difficult to establish, and people with TB may be sick for many months before they are diagnosed. As such, periods of exposure can be long. Although months have passed since the exposures occurred, there are still meaningful opportunities to protect the health of persons who were exposed.
TB is an airborne disease that is transmitted from person-to-person through inhalation of the bacteria from the air. The bacteria are spread when someone sick with TB coughs, speaks, sings or breathes. People with frequent and prolonged indoor exposure to a person who is sick with TB should get tested.
Effective treatments are available to cure people who are sick from active TB. It is especially important for people with symptoms of active TB and those who are immunocompromised to see a medical provider to rule out active TB disease and to discuss treatment.
“Symptoms of active TB include persistent cough, fever, night sweats, and unexplained weight loss,” said Ankita Kadakia, M.D., County Interim Public Health Officer. “Most people who become infected after exposure to tuberculosis do not get sick right away. This is called latent TB infection. Some who become infected with tuberculosis will become ill in the future, sometimes even years later, if their latent TB infection is not treated. For people who think they may have been exposed, blood tests and skin tests are an effective way to determine an infection.”
People who test positive for TB but don’t have symptoms of an active disease should get a chest x-ray and talk to a medical provider, as they most likely have a latent TB infection. People in this situation are infected with TB, but the infection is essentially dormant or “sleeping.” Taking medicines for latent TB infection can cure the infection and keep these people from getting sick later.
The number of people diagnosed with active TB in San Diego County had decreased since the early 1990s when more than 400 cases were reported annually. After decades of declining, TB cases have begun to rise since 2020.
In 2020, there were 193 TB cases, 201 in 2021 and 208 in 2022. In 2023, a total of 243 people were reported with active TB disease in San Diego County. The 17 percent increase in 2023 brought the County back to pre-pandemic levels.
An estimated 175,000 people in San Diego County have latent TB infection. Of these, 5 to 10 percent may develop active TB disease at some point in their lifetime if they go without preventive treatment.
People who would like more information on this potential exposure should call the County Tuberculosis Control Program at (619) 692-8621.