Factors Associated with Treatment Adherence of Patients on Anti-Tuberculosis Drugs Following Covid-19 Pandemic at Health Facilities of Masaka City, Uganda
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.47672/ajhmn.1030Keywords:
Treatment Adherence, Anti-Tuberculosis Drug, Covid-19 Pandemic.Abstract
Purpose: To examine factors associated with adherence of patients on Anti-tuberculosis treatment in Health facilities at Masaka City. Specifically the study was guided by four objectives; to establish the current level of adherence, to explore the patient knowledge, to find out socio-economic factors, and to identify Health facility factors contributing to adherence of patient on tuberculosis treatment.
Methodology: A cross-sectional research design with both quantitative and qualitative approaches of data collection and analysis was used. At least 110 patients on tuberculosis drug were selected and 15 health workers working in tuberculosis clinics to give expert views on the problem under investigation. Interview guide and questionnaires were used and data were analyzed using Stata version 13. Descriptive statistics, percentages were presented in the findings on frequency distribution tables. Qualitative data obtained using interviews was analyzed using thematic content analysis and narrative reasoning.
Results: Prevalence of adherence to TB treatment was at 86% from the patients the study was conducted. In the study most patients had adequate knowledge on Tuberculosis treatment and it had attributed a majority 86% with good adherence on Tuberculosis Drug. On health facility factors there was limited medical supplies of drug to improve care, most patients were youth. Statistically, there was significant relationship between frequent counseling and patient adherence at multivariate levels. (OR=15.5073; [95% Cl: 3.73553 to 27.27917]; p=0.010). There was no relationship between patients' adherence and employment status and good conduct of health workers was significally associated with patient adherence. (OR=7.0566; [95%Cl: 2.77620 to 11.3371]; P=0.001). In this study factors affecting adherence included stigma, discrimination and suspension of transport as COVID-19 prevention guideline by Ministry of health Uganda negatively contributed to poor adherence of patients. This was attributed to by isolation and neglect by family members, relatives, health workers and the community for fear of COVID-19 suspicion at each respective health facility. Involvement of TB survivor in TB treatment would increase adherence and retention in care.
Recommendations: In the study there was suboptimal adherence of 86% as opposed to MOH Uganda of 95%, due to stigma and discrimination. The study recommended each TB patient be assigned a family member and a village health team as treatment supporters. Intensified health education and pre TB treatment counselling on adherence increases patients ability to take medication consistently leading to good TB treatment outcomes. Not involving and supporting private clinics to provide TB services is a very big missed opportunity by the health sector. Most patients first visit private clinics before coming to public health centers. Involvement of TB survivor in TB treatment would increase adherence and retention in care.
Downloads
References
MOH, (2015). Guidelines for the programmatic management of drug-resistant TB: Emergency Poor adherence to tuberculosis treatment." Bull World Health Organ 86(3): B-D.
WHO report (fact sheet) WHO report 2011 .Geneva available at: http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2017/world-tb-day/en/.Accessed on 10/Oct./2018
World Health Organization (2010) Global Tuberculosis Control Surveillance, Planning, Financing [Online]. Available at: http:// www.who.int/tb/publications/global_report/en/ [cited 1 Nov.2019].
WHO. Estimates of TB and MDR-TB burden are produced by WHO in consultation with countries. Generated: 2018-09-22 Data: www.who.int/tb/data
MOH Uganda, COVID-19, Press release on 25 March 2020, Presidential guideline
Awofeso, N. (2008). "Anti-tuberculosis medication side-effects constitute major factor for poor adherence to tuberculosis treatment." Bull World Health Organ 86(3): B-D.
Power, (2002). Factors affecting patient compliance with anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy using the directly observed treatment, short- course strategy (DOTS). International Journal for Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases 6(4): 307-312
WHO (2016) global publication on TB burden access at http://www.who.int/tb/publications/global_report/high_tb_burdencountrylists2016-2020.pdf? , access on 10 January 2018 8, 323-332.
The Uganda National Tuberculosis Prevalence Survey, 2014-2015 Survey Report
World Health Organization (2015) Global Tuberculosis Control Surveillance, Planning, Financing [Online]. Available at: http:// www.who.int/tb/publications/global_report/en/ [cited 1 Nov.2019].
WHO (2017) global publication on TB burden annex4 access at http://www.who.int/tb/publications/global_report/gtbr2017_annex2.pdf?ua=1. access on 10th January 2018
Shortridge-Baggett, Lillie. (2001). Self-efficacy: Measurement and intervention in nursing. Scholarly inquiry for nursing practice. 15. 183-8.
USAID Defeat TB Quarterly Report January 1-March 31, 2018 reports, available at //http.www.urc-chs.com access on 2 Nov 2019
MSF Uganda, Northern Uganda, TB sport, TB Working group and non-adherence to anti tuberculosis treatment (2011)
Masaka district F/Y 2018/19 Report on TB/HIV
Brudney, K. and J. Dobkin (1991). "Resurgent tuberculosis in New York City. Human immunodeficiency virus, homelessness, and the decline of tuberculosis control programs." Am Rev Respir Dis144 (4): 745-749.
NTRL Uganda 2004 cohort study
G. B. Migliori, P. C. Hopewell, F. Blasi, A. Spanevello, M. C. Raviglione European Respiratory Journal 2006 28: 687-690; DOI: 10.1183/09031936.06.00097506
Choi H, Chung H, Muntaner C, Lee M, Kim Y, Barry CE, Cho SN. The impact of social conditions on patient adherence to pulmonary tuberculosis treatment. Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 2016 Jul;20 (7):948-54. doi: 10.5588/ijtld.15.0759. PMID: 27287649; PMCID: PMC6013067.
Tengiz V., (2019). Mothers' Knowledge and Attitudes towards Child Immunization in Georgia Content list available at: https://openpublichealthjournal.com Accepted: May 16, 2019
Kefyalew. A. A., (2019) Knowledge and practice of health Workers about control and prevention of multidrug-resistance tuberculosis in referral hospital, Ethiopia across sectional study
Hermans, Sabine & Elbireer, Sawsan & Harriet, Tibakabikoba & Hoefman, Bas & Manabe, Yukari. (2017). Text messaging to decrease tuberculosis treatment attrition in TB-HIV coinfection in Uganda. Patient Preference and Adherence. Volume 11. 1479-1487. 10.2147/PPA.S135540
Caroline De Schacht et al (2019) Barriers to access and adherence, to tuberculosis services, as perceived by patients: A qualitative study in Mozambique
Gebremariam, R.B., Wolde, M. & Beyene, A. Determinants of adherence to anti-TB treatment and associated factors among adult TB patients in Gondar city administration, Northwest, Ethiopia: based on health belief model perspective. J Health Popul Nutr 40, 49 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1186/s41043-021-00275-6
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Ogwok Patrick, Tumwebaze Mathias, Waswa Bright Laban
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgment of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.