Department of Neurology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Internal Medicine, University Teaching Hospitals-Adult Hospital, Lusaka, Zambia.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2023 Mar 27;108(5):1052-1062. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.22-0699. Print 2023 May 3.
Lumbar puncture (LP) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) diagnostics are critical for evaluating central nervous system infections but are often not conducted, resulting in the "Tap Gap." To investigate patient, provider, and health systems factors contributing to the Tap Gap in Zambia, we conducted focus group discussions with adult caregivers of hospitalized inpatients and in-depth interviews with nurses, clinicians, pharmacy workers, and laboratory staff. Transcripts were independently thematically categorized by two investigators using inductive coding. We identified seven patient-related factors: 1) alternative understandings of CSF; 2) alternative information about LPs, including misinformation; 3) mistrust of doctors; 4) consent delays; 5) fear of blame; 6) peer pressure against consent; and 7) association between LP and stigmatized conditions. Four clinician-related factors were identified: 1) limited LP knowledge and expertise, 2) time constraints, 3) delays in LP requests by clinicians, and 4) fear of blame for bad outcomes. Finally, five health systems-related factors were identified: 1) supply shortages, 2) constrained access to neuroimaging, 3) laboratory factors, 4) availability of antimicrobial medications, and 5) cost barriers. Efforts to improve LP uptake must incorporate interventions to increase patient/proxy willingness to consent and improve clinician LP competencies while addressing both upstream and downstream health system factors. Key upstream factors include inconsistently available consumables for performing LPs and lack of neuroimaging. Critical downstream factors include laboratory services that offer poor availability, reliability, and/or timeliness of CSF diagnostics and the reality that medications needed to treat diagnosed infections are often unavailable unless the family has resources to purchase privately.
腰椎穿刺 (LP) 和脑脊液 (CSF) 诊断对于评估中枢神经系统感染至关重要,但通常未进行这些诊断,导致出现“Tap Gap”。为了调查导致赞比亚 Tap Gap 的患者、医护人员和卫生系统因素,我们对住院患者的成年照顾者进行了焦点小组讨论,并对护士、临床医生、药剂师和实验室工作人员进行了深入访谈。两位研究人员独立使用归纳编码对转录本进行主题分类。我们确定了七个与患者相关的因素:1)对 CSF 的替代理解;2)关于 LP 的替代信息,包括错误信息;3)对医生的不信任;4)同意延迟;5)害怕责备;6)反对同意的同伴压力;7)LP 与污名化状况之间的关联。确定了四个与临床医生相关的因素:1)LP 知识和专业技能有限;2)时间限制;3)临床医生延迟 LP 请求;4)对不良结果的责备恐惧。最后,确定了五个与卫生系统相关的因素:1)供应短缺;2)神经影像学受限;3)实验室因素;4)抗菌药物的供应情况;5)成本障碍。为了提高 LP 使用率,必须采取干预措施来提高患者/代理人同意的意愿,并提高临床医生的 LP 能力,同时解决上游和下游卫生系统因素。关键的上游因素包括执行 LP 时不一致的耗材供应以及缺乏神经影像学。关键的下游因素包括实验室服务,这些服务提供的 CSF 诊断结果可用性、可靠性和/或及时性较差,以及除非家庭有资源私下购买,否则通常无法获得治疗确诊感染所需的药物。