Bandewar Sunita Sheel, Bhargava Madhavi, Pisal Hema, Sreekumar Sharanya, Bhan Anant, Meher Ajay, Bhargava Anurag
Secretary General, Forum for Medical Ethics Society, Mumbai, India.
Professor, Department of Community Medicine, Yenepoya Medical College, Mangalore, India.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2025 Apr 28;5(4):e0004219. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0004219. eCollection 2025.
A qualitative study was conducted during the RATIONS trial to explore the perceptions, experiences, and expectations of participants and stakeholders on the acceptability, benefits, and feasibility of the nutritional intervention to complement the trial findings for deeper exploration into why and how of these findings and other allied themes. Using purposive sampling, we recruited 58 individuals for 22 in-depth interviews (IDI) and four focus group discussions (FGDs) between January and June 2022. These included 12 patients with TB, six household contacts, and other stakeholders (18 trial members, 18 government community workers, and four National TB Elimination Program (NTEP) staff). All IDIs and FGDs were audio-recorded, transcribed, and translated. The codes were generated using an inductive process and categorized manually into themes, with direct quotes describing the themes. The intervention was found to be acceptable in terms of cultural compatibility, quality, quantity, and duration; considered beneficial in helping tolerate the adverse effects of medications, weight gain, and resuming work; and was considered life-saving by many during the COVID-19 pandemic. Other observations included food-sharing in the control arm, inability to regain pre-disease functional status despite weight gain, and preference for in-kind support. Community health workers expressed confidence in its feasibility and willingness to take responsibility for its implementation. The NTEP staff considered it feasible if necessary resources were provided. This qualitative inquiry reflected the perspectives and lived experiences of households experiencing poverty, food insecurity, TB and the stakeholders serving them. Their voices are relevant in framing policy and practice in the NTEP and future research in India and similar low-resource settings. The food-based intervention was perceived as acceptable, feasible, and beneficial for the recipients and the NTEP. Opinion on cash or support in kind was divided; many preferred in-kind support over cash, but others expressed a requirement for both.
在RATIONS试验期间开展了一项定性研究,以探讨参与者和利益相关者对营养干预措施的可接受性、益处和可行性的看法、经历及期望,以补充试验结果,从而更深入地探究这些结果产生的原因及方式以及其他相关主题。我们采用目的抽样法,在2022年1月至6月期间招募了58人进行22次深入访谈(IDI)和4次焦点小组讨论(FGD)。其中包括12名结核病患者、6名家庭接触者以及其他利益相关者(18名试验成员、18名政府社区工作者和4名国家结核病消除计划(NTEP)工作人员)。所有深入访谈和焦点小组讨论均进行了录音、转录和翻译。通过归纳过程生成编码,并手动将其归类为主题,并用直接引语描述这些主题我们发现,该干预措施在文化兼容性、质量、数量和持续时间方面是可接受的;在帮助耐受药物不良反应、体重增加和恢复工作方面被认为是有益的;在新冠疫情期间,许多人认为它是救命的。其他观察结果包括对照组中的食物分享、尽管体重增加但无法恢复病前功能状态以及对实物支持的偏好。社区卫生工作者对其可行性表示有信心,并愿意负责实施。NTEP工作人员认为,如果提供必要资源,该干预措施是可行的。这项定性研究反映了经历贫困、粮食不安全、结核病的家庭以及为他们服务的利益相关者的观点和生活经历。他们的声音对于制定NTEP的政策和实践以及印度和类似资源匮乏地区的未来研究具有重要意义。基于食物的干预措施被认为对接受者和NTEP是可接受、可行和有益的。对于现金或实物支持的意见存在分歧;许多人更喜欢实物支持而非现金,但也有人表示两者都需要。