1.Attitudes toward rehabilitating inmates among occupational therapy students in the United States
Sarah Catherine TUCKER ; Hon Keung YUEN
Journal of Educational Evaluation for Health Professions 2019;16(1):6-
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			PURPOSE: This study was to examine occupational therapy (OT) students' attitudes toward rehabilitating inmates and validate an instrument used to measure their attitudes. METHODS: OT students (n=128) from one university in Alabama, United States, completed an online survey exploring their attitudes toward rehabilitating inmates, which was assessed using the Rehabilitation Orientation Scale (ROS), a 7-point scale. Dimensional structure, internal consistency reliability, construct validity, and relations to other variables of the ROS was evaluated using factor analyses, Cronbach's alpha, known-groups method, and univariable correlations, respectively. RESULTS: Unidimensionality of the ROS was confirmed with an alpha coefficient of 0.90. The mean ROS score of the respondents was 5.1; a score toward 7 indicated a more supportive attitude. About 60% of the respondents reported supportive attitudes (i.e., an ROS score ≥5). Respondents' ROS scores were significantly higher than those of the public and criminal justice professionals. Female students reported a more supportive attitude than males. Multiple regression analysis indicated that respondents' consideration of working in prison settings after graduation and their perception that OT has a role in prison settings were significantly associated with support for rehabilitating inmates, after controlling for gender and an acquaintance with someone who has been incarcerated. CONCLUSION: Results indicated that the ROS demonstrated adequate psychometric properties as it applied to this population. The majority of respondents reported supportive attitudes toward rehabilitating inmates. Consideration of working in prison settings after graduation and the perception that OT has a role in prison settings were 2 independent factors associated with respondents' attitudes toward rehabilitating inmates.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Alabama
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Attitude of Health Personnel
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Criminal Law
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Criminals
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Female
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Health Occupations
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Male
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Methods
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Occupational Therapy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Psychometrics
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Rehabilitation
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Surveys and Questionnaires
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			United States
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
2.The Significance and Limits of Lee Quede's Anatomical Drawings.
Korean Journal of Physical Anthropology 2018;31(3):71-76
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			In 1951, in the midst of the Korean War, artist Lee Quede produced anatomical drawings to teach artistic anatomy to his student Lee Ju-yeong while interned in the Geoje prison camp. Comprising 2 books and spanning over 48 pages, 74 drawings were produced alongside explanations in a textbook format. The table of contents was ordered starting from body proportions, then the skeleton, the muscles, and the head. By part, there were 4 drawings of the trunk, 51 of the head, 7 of the arms, 9 of the legs, and 3 of the full body. Though the drawings of the head and face are both high in number and in detail, there were many errors in his depictions of the bones, and the boundaries between the structures of his muscle drawings were drawn so unclearly as to be indistinguishable. The essential forms, proportions and movement are included, but his disproportionate dedication to the head and the incoherent way that the book is arranged with no relevance to its table of contents leave something to be desired. It is regrettable that Lee Quede's return to North Korea meant that his drawings were not widely used, but despite this, I believe that these are invaluable documents in assessing the influence of Japanese artistic anatomy at the time, as well as the introductory circumstances of Korean artistic anatomy.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Anatomy, Artistic
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Arm
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Asian Continental Ancestry Group
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Democratic People's Republic of Korea
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Gyeongsangnam-do
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Head
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Korean War
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Leg
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Muscles
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Skeleton
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
3.The Study on the Lives and Health Conditions of Internees in Santo Thomas Camp of Philippines: Based on McAnlis's The War in Manila (1941–1945).
Korean Journal of Medical History 2017;26(2):265-314
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			When Japan invaded the Philippines, two missionary dentists (Dr. McAnlis and Dr. Boots) who were forced to leave Korea were captured and interned in the Santo Thomas camp in Manila. Japan continued to bombard and plunder the Philippines in the wake of the Pacific War following the Great East Asia policy, leading to serious inflation and material deficiency. More than 4,000 Allied citizens held in Santo Thomas camp without basic food and shelter. Santo Thomas Camp was equipped with the systems of the Japanese military medical officers and Western doctors of captivity based on the Geneva Conventions(1929). However, it was an unsanitary environment in a dense space, so it could not prevent endemic diseases such as dysentery and dengue fever. With the expansion of the war in Japan, prisoners in the Shanghai and Philippine prisons were not provided with medicines, cures and food for healing diseases. In May 1944, the Japanese military ordered the prisoners to reduce their ration. The war starting in September 1944, internees received 1000 kcal of food per day, and since January 1945, they received less than 800 kcal of food. This was the lowest level of food rationing in Japan's civilian prison camps. They suffered beriberi from malnutrition, and other endemic diseases. An averaged 24 kg was lost by adult men due to food shortages, and 10 percent of the 390 deaths were directly attributable to starvation. The doctors demanded food increases. The Japanese Military forced the prisoner to worship the emperor and doctors not to record malnourishment as the cause of death. During the period, the prisoners suffered from psychosomatic symptoms such as headache, diarrhea, acute inflammation, excessive smoking, and alcoholism also occurred. Thus, the San Thomas camp had many difficulties in terms of nutrition, hygiene and medical care. The Japanese military had unethical and careless medical practices in the absence of medicines. Dr. McAnlis and missionary doctors handled a lot of patients focusing mainly on examination, emergency treatment and provided the medical services needed by Philippines and foreigners as well as prisoners. Through out the war in the Great East Asia, the prisoners of Santo Thomas camp died of disease and starvation due to inhumane Japanese Policy. Appropriate dietary prescriptions and nutritional supplements are areas of medical care that treat patients' malnutrition and disease. It is also necessary to continue research because it is a responsibility related to the professionalism and ethics of medical professionals to urge them to observe the Geneva Convention.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Adult
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Alcoholism
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Asian Continental Ancestry Group
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Beriberi
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Cause of Death
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Dengue
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Dentists
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Diarrhea
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Dysentery
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Emergency Treatment
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Emigrants and Immigrants
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Endemic Diseases
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Ethics
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Far East
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Headache
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Hygiene
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Inflammation
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Inflation, Economic
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Japan
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Korea
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Male
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Malnutrition
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Military Personnel
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Missionaries
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Philippines*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prescriptions
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisoners
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Professionalism
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Smoke
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Smoking
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Starvation
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
4.The presence of sharp-edged weapon related cut mark in Joseon skull discovered at the 16th century market district of Old Seoul City ruins in South Korea.
Hyejin LEE ; Chang Seok OH ; Jong Ha HONG ; Jeongsoo KIM ; Leehyeon HAN ; Jung Min PARK ; Dong Hoon SHIN
Anatomy & Cell Biology 2017;50(4):306-309
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			A human skull was discovered at the 16th-century drainage channel of market district ruins, one of the busiest streets in the capital of Joseon kingdom. By anthropological examination, we noticed the cut mark at the right occipital part of the cranium. Judging from the wound property, it might have been caused by a strong strike using a sharp-edged weapon. As no periosteal reaction or healing signs were observed at the cut mark, he might have died shortly after the skull wound was made. We speculated that this might have been of a civilian or soldier victim who died in a battle or the decapitated head of prisoner. This is the first report about the discovery of the skull damaged by sharp-edged weapon at the archaeological sites in the capital city of Joseon Kingdom.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Drainage
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Head
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Korea*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Military Personnel
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisoners
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Seoul*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Skull*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Strikes, Employee
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Weapons*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Wounds and Injuries
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
5.Using the capture-recapture method to estimate the human immunodeficiency virus-positive population.
Jalal POOROLAJAL ; Younes MOHAMMADI ; Farzad FARZINARA
Epidemiology and Health 2017;39(1):e2017042-
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			OBJECTIVES: The capture-recapture method was applied to estimate the number of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive individuals not registered with any data sources. METHODS: This cross-sectional study was conducted in Lorestan Province, in the west of Iran, in 2016. Three incomplete sources of HIV-positive individuals, with partially overlapping data, were used, including: (a) transfusion center, (b) volunteer counseling and testing centers (VCTCs), and (c) prison. The 3-source capture-recapture method, using a log-linear model, was applied for data analysis. The Akaike information criterion and the Bayesian information criterion were used for model selection. RESULTS: Of the 2,456 HIV-positive patients registered in these 3 data sources, 1,175 (47.8%) were identified in transfusion center, 867 (35.3%) in VCTCs, and 414 (16.8%) in prison. After the exclusion of duplicate entries, 2,281 HIV-positive patients remained. Based on the capture-recapture method, 14,868 (95% confidence interval, 9,923 to 23,427) HIV-positive individuals were not identified in any of the registries. Therefore, the real number of HIV-positive individuals was estimated to be 17,149, and the overall completeness of the 3 registries was estimated to be around 13.3%. CONCLUSIONS: Based on capture-recapture estimates, a huge number of HIV-positive individuals are not registered with any of the provincial data sources. This is an urgent message for policymakers who plan and provide health care services for HIV-positive patients. Although the capture-recapture method is a useful statistical approach for estimating unknown populations, due to the assumptions and limitations of the method, the population size may be overestimated as it seems possible in our results.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Counseling
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Cross-Sectional Studies
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Delivery of Health Care
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			HIV
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			HIV Seropositivity
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Information Storage and Retrieval
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Iran
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Linear Models
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Methods*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Population Density
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Registries
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Statistics as Topic
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Volunteers
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
6.Using the capture-recapture method to estimate the human immunodeficiency virus-positive population
Jalal POOROLAJAL ; Younes MOHAMMADI ; Farzad FARZINARA
Epidemiology and Health 2017;39(1):2017042-
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			OBJECTIVES: The capture-recapture method was applied to estimate the number of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive individuals not registered with any data sources.METHODS: This cross-sectional study was conducted in Lorestan Province, in the west of Iran, in 2016. Three incomplete sources of HIV-positive individuals, with partially overlapping data, were used, including: (a) transfusion center, (b) volunteer counseling and testing centers (VCTCs), and (c) prison. The 3-source capture-recapture method, using a log-linear model, was applied for data analysis. The Akaike information criterion and the Bayesian information criterion were used for model selection.RESULTS: Of the 2,456 HIV-positive patients registered in these 3 data sources, 1,175 (47.8%) were identified in transfusion center, 867 (35.3%) in VCTCs, and 414 (16.8%) in prison. After the exclusion of duplicate entries, 2,281 HIV-positive patients remained. Based on the capture-recapture method, 14,868 (95% confidence interval, 9,923 to 23,427) HIV-positive individuals were not identified in any of the registries. Therefore, the real number of HIV-positive individuals was estimated to be 17,149, and the overall completeness of the 3 registries was estimated to be around 13.3%.CONCLUSIONS: Based on capture-recapture estimates, a huge number of HIV-positive individuals are not registered with any of the provincial data sources. This is an urgent message for policymakers who plan and provide health care services for HIV-positive patients. Although the capture-recapture method is a useful statistical approach for estimating unknown populations, due to the assumptions and limitations of the method, the population size may be overestimated as it seems possible in our results.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Counseling
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Cross-Sectional Studies
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Delivery of Health Care
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			HIV
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			HIV Seropositivity
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Information Storage and Retrieval
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Iran
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Linear Models
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Methods
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Population Density
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Registries
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Statistics as Topic
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Volunteers
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
7.A debate about telemedicine in South Korea.
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2016;59(11):828-831
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			In 2002 the introduction of a telemedicine clause into the Medical Law allowed telemedicine consults between physicians and health care providers. The Korean government decided to launch a pilot program to provide online health services for people who resided in rural or remote areas such as island dwellers, prisoners, soldiers, and the crew of a pelagic trawler in 2014. However, since the accessibility to medical facilities has been well-established in South Korea, it was hard to determine whether the pilot programs, in terms of safety, were successful or not. The majority of people argue that telemedicine should be performed by medical professionals only for achieving accessibility. Nonetheless, if telemedicine were proven to be useful with respect to safety and validity, then broadening the application of telemedicine between physicians and patients may need reconsideration.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Health Personnel
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Health Services
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Jurisprudence
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Korea*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Military Personnel
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisoners
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Telemedicine*
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
8.Forensic Analysis of 25 Cases of Unnatural Death in Custody.
Journal of Forensic Medicine 2016;32(5):346-349
		                        		
		                        			OBJECTIVES:
		                        			To screen and collect the cases of unnatural death in custody and analyze the influences and forensic characteristics.
		                        		
		                        			METHODS:
		                        			Total 25 cases of unnatural death in detainees in custody form 2000 to 2015 were collected. Some forensic characteristics such as gender, age, yearly incidence, causes of death, manner of death were analyzed. The public security custodies were also compared with the prisons.
		                        		
		                        			RESULTS:
		                        			All dead involved were male, mostly were young and middle-aged adults. It showed that the number of cases tended to decrease year by year. The incidence of the injury cases were higher in public security custodies (64.7%) than that in the prisons (12.5%). However, there was a higher suicide rate in prisons (62.5%) than that in public security custodies (23.5%). The mainly cause of death were injury and asphyxia, there were also some cases died from intoxication and electricity.
		                        		
		                        			CONCLUSIONS
		                        			The cases of unnatural death in custody expose some problems such as the imperfectness of law enforcement standardization, supervision loopholes and poor medical standards. A comprehensive and detailed autopsy has important implications for the identification of cause of death in custody.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Adult
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Asphyxia
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Autopsy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Cause of Death
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Electricity
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Male
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Middle Aged
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Poisoning
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Suicide
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
9.Research by Psychiatrists of Chosun Chongdokbu Hospital and Keijo Imperial University in Korea during Japanese Colonial Rule.
Sung Kil MIN ; Chang Ho LEE ; Kyubak LEE
Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association 2015;54(2):142-171
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			Eighty-three of 114 original articles and abstracts of research published by neuropsychiatrists of Chosun Chongdokbu Hospital (the Japanese colonial government hospital in Korea) and Keijo (Seoul) Imperial University Hospital during the Japanese colonial period (1910-1945) in journals including Shinkeigaku-zassi (Neurologia), Seishin-shinkei-gaku zassi (Psychiatria Et Neurologia Japonica), and The Journal of Chosun (Korea) Medical Association were reviewed. Most articles were on clinical research based on descriptive and biological psychiatry while only 4 articles were on dynamic psychiatry, probably because Japanese pioneers in psychiatry had introduced German psychiatry into Japan during the 1880s. The first paper was written by Dr. Shim Ho-sub. Professor Kubo of Keijo (Seoul) Imperial University published most articles, followed by Dr. Hikari, Dr. Hattori, and Dr. Sugihara. There were more articles on symptomatic psychosis and morphine addiction, followed by general paralysis, schizophrenia, neurological diseases, narcolepsy, epilepsy, and neurasthenia. The meaningful articles even for today were comparative studies between Japanese and Koreans and articles on opioid use disorder in Korea. Authors reported a markedly lower rate of psychotic inpatients in the population of Koreans compared with Japanese. Japanese researchers argued that, because of simpleness in social life in Korea and less violence or excitement in symptoms, Korean mental patients could be cared for by family or members of the community, or be treated by shamanism rather than bringing them to a public mental hospital, and poverty also prohibited hospital care. Finding of higher ratio of schizophrenia to manic-depressive psychosis among Koreans than Japanese was discussed in relation to delayed cultural development of Korea compared to Japan. In addition, traditional customs prohibiting marriage between relatives in Korea was related to low prevalence of manic-depressive psychosis, local endemic malaria was related to low prevalence of general paresis, and poor general hygiene was related to high prevalence of epilepsy. Unclear (undifferentiated) form of psychotic symptoms including hallucination and delusion was reported in more Koreans than Japanese. Also Korean patients showed a more atypical form in diagnosis. Authors added that they had found no culture-specific mental illness in Korea. However, no Korean psychiatrists were included as author in such comparative studies. Comparative studies on constitution between Koreans and Japanese mental patients and prisoners were also unique. However, no Korean psychiatrists participated in such comparative studies. In studies on morphine addiction in Koreans, Japanese researchers argued that such studies were necessary to prevent introduction of morphine-related criminal phenomena to Japan. Meanwhile, Dr. Kubo had left a notion on adaptation problems of Japanese living in the foreign country, Korea. Nevertheless he reported nothing about psychosocial aspects of mental illness in relation to political, cultural, and economic difficulties Koreans were experiencing under the colonial rule of Japan. These general trends of studies based on German biological and descriptive psychiatry and policies of colonial government to isolate "dangerous" mental patients in hospital appeared to reflect colonial or ethnopsychiatry of those days. These policy and research trends seem to have worsened stigma attached to mental disorders. Japanese tradition of psychiatric research was discontinued by return home of Japanese scholars with the end of WWII and colonial rule.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Biological Psychiatry
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Bipolar Disorder
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Constitution and Bylaws
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Criminals
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Delusions
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Diagnosis
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Epilepsy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Ethnopsychology
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Hallucinations
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Hospitals, Psychiatric
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Hygiene
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Inpatients
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Japan
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Korea
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Malaria
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Marriage
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Mental Disorders
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Mentally Ill Persons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Morphine Dependence
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Narcolepsy
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Neurasthenia
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Neuropsychiatry
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Neurosyphilis
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Poverty
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prevalence
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisoners
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Psychiatry*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Psychotic Disorders
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Schizophrenia
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Shamanism
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Violence
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
10.First Outcome of MDR-TB among Co-Infected HIV/TB Patients from South-West Iran.
Mohammad MOTAMEDIFAR ; Hadi Sedigh EBRAHIM-SARAIE ; Ali Reza Hassan ABADI ; Mahboube Nakhzari MOGHADAM
Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases 2015;78(3):253-257
		                        		
		                        			
		                        			BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of mortality among human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) patients and the majority of them occur in developing countries. The aims of the present study were to determine the frequency of HIV/TB co-infection and other probable associated factors. METHODS: This 10 year retrospective study was conducted on 824 HIV patients in the south-west of Iran. HIV infection was diagnosed by the enzyme linked immunosorbent assay and confirmed by Western blot. TB diagnosis was based on consistency of the clinical manifestations, chest X-ray, and microscopic examination. Drug susceptibility testing was done by the proportional method on Lowenstein-Jensen media. RESULTS: Of 824 HIV patients, 59 (7.2%) were identified as TB co-infected and the majority (86.4%) of them were male. Of the overall TB infected patients, 6 cases (10.2%) showed multidrug-resistant with the mean CD4+ lymphocyte count of 163+/-166 cells/mm3. The main clinical forms of TB were pulmonary (73%). There was a significant (p<0.05) correlation between TB infection and CD4+ lymphocyte counts < or =200 cells/mm3, gender, prison history, addiction history, and highly active anti-retroviral therapy. CONCLUSION: We reported novel information on frequency of HIV/TB co-infection and multidrug resistant-TB outcome among co-infected patients that could facilitate better management of such infections on a global scale.
		                        		
		                        		
		                        		
		                        			Blotting, Western
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Coinfection
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Developing Countries
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Diagnosis
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			HIV
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			HIV Infections
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Humans
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Iran*
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Lymphocyte Count
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Male
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Methods
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Mortality
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Prisons
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Retrospective Studies
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Thorax
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Tuberculosis
		                        			;
		                        		
		                        			Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant
		                        			
		                        		
		                        	
            
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