Why would someone be required to have 2 TB tests a week apart

Liz

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My daughter is going to work a few hours a week at a Children's Hospital as a volunteer and part of the process before she can begin requires having two TB tests approximately a week apart. If the first one comes back negative why would they need to do another one? I've had to do a TB test for work but never have heard of a place requiring two.

Thanks!
 
My daughter is going to work a few hours a week at a Children's Hospital as a volunteer and part of the process before she can begin requires having two TB tests approximately a week apart. If the first one comes back negative why would they need to do another one? I've had to do a TB test for work but never have heard of a place requiring two.

Thanks!

Not sure, but a google search brought up this (scroll to the bottom)...

http://www.chabotcollege.edu/NURS/immunization.asp

It looks like it is a 2 step test. Apparently it is common for those working in a medical setting.
 
It is a two step test. After the first two step test, should she continue to volunteer at the same place, next time would only have to be a 1 step.

Ive had numerous 1 step and 2 steps done. Some of my employers allowed me to show proof of having a test done within a year and then was able to only do the one step part.
 
Because sometimes on test 1 - if someone had been exposed, it wouldn't show up, the first round.

ANd as a PP mentioned, very common in any sort of hospital enviroment.
 
Thank you both! I was worried about her having the test to begin with because 1) she is immunosuppressed and 2) I worry about everything with her! We checked with her cardiology team before having the test and they said it was fine. It just made me a little nervous that she has to have it twice. I am sure it will be okay.

Thank you again!
 
There are a number of people in the general population who test positive for TB. For example, my father contracted TB when he was a kid (prior to WW2). He had treatment--mainly bed rest in those days, fully recovered, and always tested positive for TB. Any TB test he had as an adult, he was required to have an x-ray as a second test to make sure the disease was gone.
 
Thank you both! I was worried about her having the test to begin with because 1) she is immunosuppressed and 2) I worry about everything with her! We checked with her cardiology team before having the test and they said it was fine. It just made me a little nervous that she has to have it twice. I am sure it will be okay.

Thank you again!


You have nothing to worry about with the test, I am also immunosuppressed due to the drugs that I take from a liver transplant that I had 23 or so years ago and I have had a TB test multiple times for work and school with no issues or worries from any of my doctors. I have heard that sometimes people who are immunocomprimised may have a false positive for the TB test (this has never happened to me). In that case she would probably have to have a chest x-ray to rule out active TB.
 
Don't worry, it's normal for the test to be in 2 steps. Usually, you are given a very small injection of te vaccination under the skin on your arm. If it leaves a mark (other than the possible bruising some people get from the needle) then you have natural immunity and don't need to have the actual vaccination. If like me, you're not immune already you then have to have the second part. We had to have it done when I started my nursing degree
 
Don't worry, it's normal for the test to be in 2 steps. Usually, you are given a very small injection of te vaccination under the skin on your arm. If it leaves a mark (other than the possible bruising some people get from the needle) then you have natural immunity and don't need to have the actual vaccination. If like me, you're not immune already you then have to have the second part. We had to have it done when I started my nursing degree

Well if you are going for nursing, I need to clear up that it is not a Vaccination. You can still get TB, even after having both steps. When you are retested in a year with a one step it shows if you had been exposed to TB since your last test.
 
Well if you are going for nursing, I need to clear up that it is not a Vaccination. You can still get TB, even after having both steps. When you are retested in a year with a one step it shows if you had been exposed to TB since your last test.

I wonder how it works - I shall have to research it. We have to have it in order to treat tb patients and you would think they would make us as safe as possible ....... Curious now;)
 
Don't worry, it's normal for the test to be in 2 steps. Usually, you are given a very small injection of te vaccination under the skin on your arm. If it leaves a mark (other than the possible bruising some people get from the needle) then you have natural immunity and don't need to have the actual vaccination. If like me, you're not immune already you then have to have the second part. We had to have it done when I started my nursing degree
You misunderstood. It is not a vaccine. It is a test to see if the person was ever infected with TB.

I've probably given about one thousand of them in my career as a nurse.

The test is called a Mantoux skin test for TB (Tuberculosis). It is also called a PPD test. PPD stands for purified protein derivative and the protein is a protein from the TB organism. It is not the whole TB Mycobacterium and can't cause or prevent TB. It is enough to cause a reaction if someone has been infected with TB in the past.
A small amount of the PPD solution is injected just under the top layers of skin. If it is given correctly, it will form a small bubble underneath the skin. This bubble will be absorbed in the next few hours and the bubble will go away. Occasionally, there will be some bruising if the needle nicked a small blood vessel.

If the person has had TB in the past, their immune system should react to the PPD and cause a reaction in the area 48 to 72 hours later at the area where the test was given. The area may have some redness, but the redness is ignored in reading the test. A positive test is shown by some 'thickening' under the skin, called induration, which would be measured to see if it is large enough to meet the definition of a positive test.
A positive test means that the person has been infected with TB at some time in the past. It doesn't tell when or whether the person had disease caused by TB. Most people who are infected with TB will not have TB disease (so will not become ill).

So, what is a 2 step TB test and why is it done?
Sometimes the immune system does not react to the TB skin test, even though the person had been infected with TB in the past. Reasons for this happening can include currently taking immunosuppressive drugs, having a condition that causes their immune system to not work correctly or having been infected with TB many years ago.
So, when the first test is given, there is no reaction, because the immune system doesn't 'remember' it has fought TB before.
But, the first test may 'remind' the immune system that it had previously reacted to TB and it reacts to the TB test by preparing to react the next time TB proteins show up in the body. This is called 'boosting'.

The 2nd step TB test takes advantage of this boosting. When someone has been infected with TB in the past, the second TB test will cause a reaction in most cases. If the second test is negative ( no significant reaction), there is very little chance that person has ever had TB.
Health care facilities give 2 step TB tests to people who either never had a TB test in the past or had their last TB test many years ago. This helps make sure that any infected people can be identified and evaluated to see if they need medication to prevent ever becoming ill with TB.

Why do they give TB tests to Health Care Workers?
There are 2 reasons.
The first reason is to make sure that the Health Care Workers are not infected to start with. if they are, they can be given preventative medicine to keep them from becoming ill.
The second reason would be to have a 'baseline' or beginning point. If the Health Care Worker cares for someone with TB illness, they can be tested again to see if they have become infected. If they have, they can be treated to prevent becoming ill.

So, is there a TB vaccine?
Yes. It is called BCG vaccine (Bacillus Calmette-Guérin). It is used in many areas of the world where TB is common because the risk of becoming infected and ill with TB is high in those areas.
It is NOT used in the US because TB is not very common and the risk of becoming infected with TB is generally low.
 
I wonder how it works - I shall have to research it. We have to have it in order to treat tb patients and you would think they would make us as safe as possible ....... Curious now;)

For us to be able to treat TB patients we had to be fitted with special masks at one hospital I was at the one im at now uses a hood with its own oxygen supply.
 
Hi. I am a special education in a residential school and i fall under the health care rules. I used to have to get a TB test done once a year. As of last year they changed the rules. Instead of getting one done every year I got 2 done, a week apart. If they both came back negative I would not have to continue getting them done each year.
 
Thank you, again, for the responses!

Gillep, sounds like you are doing great with your liver transplant. My daughter had a heart transplant and her 23rd anniversary is coming up May 12th. Wishing you continued good health. :)
 












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