Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Chest X-ray (CXR) is recommended by the World Health Organization as a TB screening tool on admission to prison. We piloted the offer of CXR on admission to prison to understand if it was acceptable to residents, feasible to deliver within 48 h of admission, and to inform TB epidemiology. STUDY DESIGN: Cross-sectional. METHODS: Between 1 September 2023 and 31 March 2024, CXRs were offered to new prison admissions. We measured the numbers accepting, numbers completed and the results. For each person accepting the CXR we undertook an assessment of clinical and social TB risks. We measured the time taken to deliver the CXR and receive results. RESULTS: CXR was acceptable to those in prison with 61.0 % (n = 310) of new admissions accepting the offer. Of those accepting the offer, 226 (72.9 %) went on to receive a CXR, equating to 44.5 % of all new arrivals within the pilot period. A quarter of those accepting the CXR offer did not attend their first appointment and needed further appointment offers. We observed that as the number of rearranged appointments increased the number of men attending decreased. The total median number of days from arrival at the prison to completion of CXR was 17 [IQR 13-20 days]. We did not identify any respiratory TB, however nine (4.0 %) CXRs were abnormal. CONCLUSIONS: CXR screening was acceptable to prison residents but we could not achieve delivery within 48 h of arrival to prison. We identified other respiratory abnormalities suggesting CXR screening could be used as a wider respiratory health screen of which TB would be included.