Armstrong Edward, Das Mrinalini, Mansoor Homa, Babu Ramesh B, Isaakidis Petros
Médecins Sans Frontières, Chandni Bungalow, Union Park, Off Carter Road, Khar (W), Mumbai, 400 052 India.
District TB Control Office (RNTCP), Khammam District, Andhra Pradesh India.
Confl Health. 2014 Dec 1;8:25. doi: 10.1186/1752-1505-8-25. eCollection 2014.
The eastern part of India has been affected by an ongoing low-intensity conflict between government forces and armed Maoist groups, known as Naxalites. Since 2006, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) has been providing primary health care services in the conflict-affected region along the Andhra Pradesh-Chhattisgarh border. In 2011, treatment for drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) was included in the services provided. This report aims to describe MSF experiences of providing treatment to DR-TB patients in a mobile primary health care outpatient clinic, in a low-intensity conflict setting in India.
A total of thirteen patients were diagnosed with drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) between January 2011 and October 2013. An innovative treatment model was developed which delegated responsibility to non-TB clinicians, including primary-care nurses and nurse-aids who were remotely supported by a TB-specialist from the MSF DR-TB project in Mumbai. Individualised regimens were designed for each patient based on WHO guidelines. Of these 13 patients, 10 patients had an outcome, of whom seven (70%) patients were cured. One patient became lost to follow-up prior to treatment initiation, one patient died prior to starting treatment and one patient refused treatment. Three patients were on-treatment, were clinically improving and were culture-negative at the end of their intensive phase of treatment.
Drug-resistant tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment is a highly specialised and technical subject which requires continued patient follow-up. However, our study demonstrates that it is feasible to manage DR-TB patients in a conflict setting, using a primary-care model with remote expert support. Long-term commitment and sustainability are essential for continued care, even more so in similar conflict settings. Loss to follow-up in patients remains a programmatic challenge and community involvement may play a key role.
Managing DR-TB in a primary health care programme is feasible in a low-conflict setting with an appropriate treatment model. Ambulatory strategies and standardised treatment regimens should be considered to further simplify treatment delivery and allow for scale-up when needed.
印度东部地区一直受到政府部队与武装毛派组织(即纳萨尔派)之间持续的低强度冲突影响。自2006年以来,无国界医生组织一直在安得拉邦 - 恰蒂斯加尔邦边境的冲突影响地区提供初级卫生保健服务。2011年,耐多药结核病(DR-TB)治疗被纳入所提供的服务中。本报告旨在描述无国界医生组织在印度低强度冲突环境下,通过流动初级卫生保健门诊为耐多药结核病患者提供治疗的经验。
2011年1月至2013年10月期间,共有13名患者被诊断为耐多药结核病(DR-TB)。开发了一种创新的治疗模式,将责任委托给非结核病临床医生,包括初级保健护士和护士助理,他们由孟买无国界医生组织耐多药结核病项目的结核病专家提供远程支持。根据世界卫生组织指南为每位患者设计个性化治疗方案。在这13名患者中,10名患者有治疗结果,其中7名(70%)患者治愈。1名患者在开始治疗前失访,1名患者在开始治疗前死亡,1名患者拒绝治疗。3名患者正在接受治疗,临床症状正在改善,在强化治疗阶段结束时培养结果为阴性。
耐多药结核病的诊断和治疗是一个高度专业化和技术性的课题,需要持续对患者进行随访。然而,我们的研究表明,在冲突环境中,使用具有远程专家支持的初级保健模式来管理耐多药结核病患者是可行的。长期承诺和可持续性对于持续护理至关重要,在类似的冲突环境中更是如此。患者失访仍然是一个项目挑战,社区参与可能发挥关键作用。
在低冲突环境下,采用适当的治疗模式,在初级卫生保健项目中管理耐多药结核病是可行的。应考虑采用门诊策略和标准化治疗方案,以进一步简化治疗提供,并在需要时实现扩大规模。