WHO_NUT_TB_2013_11_3

Children who are less than 5 years of age with active
TB and severe acute malnutrition should be treated
in accordance with the WHO recommendations for
the management of severe acute malnutrition in
children who are less than 5 years of age.

WHO_NUT_TB_2013_11_2

Sschool-age children and adolescents (5 to 19 years),
and adults, including pregnant and lactating women,
with active TB and severe acute malnutrition should
be treated in accordance with the WHO
recommendations for management of severe acute
malnutrition.

WHO_NUT_TB_2013_11_12

In settings where contact tracing is implemented,
household contacts of people with active TB should
have a nutrition screening and assessment as part of
contact investigation. If malnutrition is identified,
it should be managed according to WHO
recommendations.

WHO_NUT_TB_2013_11_10

For pregnant women with active TB in settings where
calcium intake is low, calcium supplementation
as part of antenatal care is recommended for
the prevention of pre-eclampsia, particularly
among those pregnant women at higher risk of
developing hypertension, in accordance with WHO
recommendations.

WHO_HTM_TB_2013_04_7

(a) Systematic screening for active TB may be considered for geographically
defined subpopulations with extremely high levels of undetected TB (1%
prevalence or higher).
(b) Systematic screening for active TB may be considered also for other
subpopulations that have very poor access to health care, such as people
living in urban slums, homeless people, people living in remote areas with
poor access to health care, and other vulnerable or marginalized groups
including some indigenous populations, migrants and refugees.

WHO_HTM_TB_2013_04_6

In settings where the TB prevalence in the general
population is 100/100 000 population or higher, systematic screening for
active TB should be considered among people who are seeking health care or
who are in health care and who belong to selected risk groups.