Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, London School for Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Faculty of Public Health and Policy, London, UK.
Zankli Research Centre, Bingham University, Karu, Nigeria.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2023 Nov 23;23(1):1288. doi: 10.1186/s12913-023-10305-0.
Rapid diagnostic testing may support improved treatment of COVID patients. Understanding COVID testing and care pathways is important for assessing the impact and cost-effectiveness of testing in the real world, yet there is limited information on these pathways in low-and-middle income countries (LMICs). We therefore undertook an expert consultation to better understand testing policies and practices, clinical screening, the profile of patients seeking testing or care, linkage to care after testing, treatment, lessons learnt and expected changes in 2023.
We organized a qualitative consultation with ten experts from seven LMICs (India, Indonesia, Malawi, Nigeria, Peru, South Africa, and Zimbabwe) identified through purposive sampling. We conducted structured interviews during six regional consultations, and undertook a thematic analysis of responses.
Participants reported that, after initial efforts to scale-up testing, the policy priority given to COVID testing has declined. Comorbidities putting patients at heightened risk (e.g., diabetes) mainly relied on self-identification. The decision to test following clinical screening was highly context-/location-specific, often dictated by local epidemiology and test availability. When rapid diagnostic tests were available, public sector healthcare providers tended to rely on them for diagnosis (alongside PCR for Asian/Latin American participants), while private sector providers predominantly used polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests. Positive test results were generally taken at 'face value' by clinicians, although negative tests with a high index of suspicion may be confirmed with PCR. However, even with a positive result, patients were not always linked to care in a timely manner because of reluctance to receiving care or delays in returning to care centres upon clinical deterioration. Countries often lacked multiple components of the range of therapeutics advised in WHO guidelines: notably so for oral antivirals designed for high-risk mild patients. Severely ill patients mostly received corticosteroids and, in higher-resourced settings, tocilizumab.
Testing does not always prompt enhanced care, due to reluctance on the part of patients and limited therapeutic availability within clinical settings. Any analysis of the impact or cost-effectiveness of testing policies post pandemic needs to either consider investment in optimal treatment pathways or constrain estimates of benefits based on actual practice.
快速诊断检测可能有助于改善 COVID 患者的治疗效果。了解 COVID 检测和护理途径对于评估检测在现实世界中的影响和成本效益非常重要,但在中低收入国家(LMICs),关于这些途径的信息有限。因此,我们进行了一次专家咨询,以更好地了解检测政策和实践、临床筛查、寻求检测或护理的患者特征、检测后的护理联系、治疗、经验教训以及 2023 年的预期变化。
我们通过有针对性的抽样,从七个 LMICs(印度、印度尼西亚、马拉维、尼日利亚、秘鲁、南非和津巴布韦)中确定了十名专家,组织了一次定性咨询。我们在六次区域咨询中进行了结构化访谈,并对答复进行了主题分析。
参与者报告说,在最初努力扩大检测范围后,对 COVID 检测的政策重点已经下降。使患者面临更高风险的合并症(例如糖尿病)主要依靠自我识别。在临床筛查后进行检测的决定高度取决于具体情况/地点,通常由当地流行病学和检测可用性决定。当快速诊断检测可用时,公共部门医疗保健提供者倾向于依靠它们进行诊断(亚洲/拉丁美洲参与者同时进行 PCR),而私营部门提供者主要使用聚合酶链反应(PCR)检测。临床医生通常会接受检测结果的“表面价值”,尽管对于高度怀疑的阴性检测,可能会使用 PCR 进行确认。然而,即使检测结果呈阳性,由于患者不愿意接受治疗或在临床恶化后返回护理中心的延迟,他们也不一定能及时获得护理。各国通常缺乏世卫组织指南中建议的一系列治疗方法的多个组成部分:对于专为高风险轻症患者设计的口服抗病毒药物尤其如此。重症患者主要接受皮质类固醇治疗,在资源更丰富的环境中,还会接受托珠单抗治疗。
由于患者的不情愿和临床环境中有限的治疗方法,检测并不总是会促使加强护理。任何对大流行后检测政策的影响或成本效益的分析都需要考虑对最佳治疗途径的投资,或者根据实际情况限制对收益的估计。