Daftary A, Padayatchi N
McGill International TB Centre, McGill University, Montreal, Canada; Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa (CAPRISA), SA Medical Research Council Extramural TB Pathogenesis Research Unit, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa (CAPRISA), SA Medical Research Council Extramural TB Pathogenesis Research Unit, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2016 Nov;20(11):1483-1488. doi: 10.5588/ijtld.16.0111.
To examine influences on health care workers' (HCWs') capacity to deliver health care for multi- and/or extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR/XDR-TB) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection in South Africa.
Qualitative data were collected via group and individual interviews with a purposive sample of 17 HCWs at a centralised, tertiary TB facility and analysed using grounded theory.
Four themes were identified: 1) personal infection control practices among HCWs may be weakened by a workplace culture comprising low motivation, disparate risk perceptions and practices across workforce hierarchies, physical discomfort, and problems managing patients with treatment-induced hearing loss. 2) Patient-provider interactions are likely stronger among nurses, and in HIV vs. MDR/XDR-TB service delivery, due to greater attention to patient empowerment and support. Stigma associated with MDR/XDR-TB, considered worse than HIV, may be perpetuated within non-specialised facilities less familiar with MDR/XDR-TB. 3) HCWs who struggle with the daily tedium of MDR/XDR-TB treatment supervision are becoming increasingly supportive of treatment literacy and self-administration. 4) Effective integration of HIV and MDR/XDR-TB services may be impeded by administrative restrictions, workplace norms and provider mindsets.
Comprehensive, decentralised management of MDR/XDR-TB and HIV coinfection requires the creation of patient-provider trust and treatment literacy in MDR/XDR-TB programmes, and defying workplace norms that could provoke nosocomial TB exposure and fragmented service provision.
研究对南非医护人员提供耐多药和/或广泛耐药结核病(MDR/XDR-TB)及人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染医疗服务能力的影响。
通过对一家集中式三级结核病机构的17名医护人员进行有目的抽样的小组和个人访谈收集定性数据,并采用扎根理论进行分析。
确定了四个主题:1)医护人员个人感染控制措施可能因工作场所文化而被削弱,这种文化包括积极性低、不同层级员工风险认知和做法各异、身体不适以及管理治疗导致听力损失患者的问题。2)由于更注重患者赋权和支持,护士之间以及在HIV与MDR/XDR-TB服务提供方面,医患互动可能更强。在不太熟悉MDR/XDR-TB的非专科医院中,与MDR/XDR-TB相关的耻辱感(被认为比HIV更严重)可能会持续存在。3)因MDR/XDR-TB治疗监督日常工作乏味而苦恼的医护人员越来越支持提高治疗知识水平和自我给药。4)行政限制、工作场所规范和医护人员思维方式可能会阻碍HIV与MDR/XDR-TB服务的有效整合。
对MDR/XDR-TB和HIV合并感染进行全面、分散管理,需要在MDR/XDR-TB项目中建立医患信任并提高治疗知识水平,打破可能引发医院内结核病传播和服务提供碎片化的工作场所规范。