Kerrigan Deanna, West Nora, Tudor Carrie, Hanrahan Colleen F, Lebina Limakatso, Msandiwa Reginah, Mmolawa Lesego, Martinson Neil, Dowdy David
Department of Health Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 N. Broadway, Hampton House 257, Baltimore, MD, 21205, United States of America.
Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Room E6532, Baltimore, MD, 21205, United States of America.
Health Res Policy Syst. 2017 May 30;15(1):42. doi: 10.1186/s12961-017-0206-8.
Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading infectious killer worldwide, with approximately 1.8 million deaths in 2015. While effective treatment exists, implementation of active case finding (ACF) methods to identify persons with active TB in a timely and cost-effective manner continues to be a major challenge in resource-constrained settings. Limited qualitative work has been conducted to gain an in-depth understanding of implementation barriers.
Qualitative research was conducted to inform the development of three ACF strategies for TB to be evaluated as part of the Kharitode cluster-randomised trial being conducted in a rural province of South Africa. This included 25 semi-structured in-depth interviews among 8 TB patients, 7 of their household members and 10 clinic health workers, as well as 4 focus group discussions (2 rural and 2 main town locations) with 6-8 participants each (n = 27). Interviews and focus group discussions explored the context, advantages and limitations, as well as the implications of three ACF methods. Content analysis was utilised to document salient themes regarding their feasibility, acceptability and potential effectiveness.
Study participants (TB patients and community members) reported difficulty identifying TB symptoms and seeking care in a timely fashion. In turn, all stakeholder groups felt that more proactive case finding strategies would be beneficial. Clinic-based strategies (including screening all patients regardless of visit purpose) were seen as the most acceptable method based on participants' preference ranking of the ACF strategies. However, given the resource constraints experienced by the public healthcare system in South Africa, many participants doubted whether it would be the most effective strategy. Household outreach and incentive-based strategies were described as promising, but participants reported some concerns (e.g. stigma in case of household-based and ethical concerns in the case of incentives). Participants offered insights into how to optimise each strategy, tailoring implementation to community needs (low TB knowledge) and realities (financial constraints, transport, time off from work).
Findings suggest different methods of TB ACF are likely to engage different populations, highlighting the utility of a comprehensive approach.
Clinicaltrials.gov ( NCT02808507 ). Registered June 1, 2016. The participants in this formative study are not trial participants.
结核病是全球主要的感染性致死病因,2015年约有180万人死亡。尽管存在有效的治疗方法,但在资源有限的环境中,以及时且具成本效益的方式实施主动病例发现(ACF)方法来识别活动性结核病患者仍是一项重大挑战。为深入了解实施障碍,已开展的定性研究有限。
开展定性研究,为三种结核病ACF策略的制定提供信息,这三种策略将作为在南非一个农村省份进行的卡里托德整群随机试验的一部分进行评估。研究包括对8名结核病患者、7名患者家庭成员和10名诊所医护人员进行25次半结构化深入访谈,以及在农村和主要城镇地区分别进行4次焦点小组讨论(每次讨论有6 - 8名参与者,共27人)。访谈和焦点小组讨论探讨了三种ACF方法的背景、优缺点以及影响。采用内容分析法记录有关其可行性、可接受性和潜在有效性的突出主题。
研究参与者(结核病患者和社区成员)报告称,他们在识别结核病症状并及时就医方面存在困难。相应地,所有利益相关者群体都认为更积极主动的病例发现策略会有益处。根据参与者对ACF策略的偏好排序,基于诊所的策略(包括筛查所有患者,无论就诊目的如何)被视为最可接受的方法。然而,鉴于南非公共医疗系统面临的资源限制,许多参与者怀疑这是否会是最有效的策略。家庭外展和基于激励的策略被描述为有前景,但参与者也表达了一些担忧(例如基于家庭的策略存在污名化问题,基于激励的策略存在伦理问题)。参与者就如何优化每种策略提供了见解,根据社区需求(结核病知识匮乏)和实际情况(经济限制、交通、误工时间)调整实施方式。
研究结果表明,不同的结核病ACF方法可能会涉及不同人群,凸显了综合方法的实用性。
Clinicaltrials.gov(NCT02808507)。于2016年6月1日注册。本形成性研究的参与者并非试验参与者。