D. Nair, P. Thekkur, I. Mbithi, M. Khogali, R. Zachariah, S. Dar Berger, S. Satyanarayana, A.M.V. Kumar, I. Kathure, J. Mwangi, A. Bochner, A. McClelland, J. M. Chakaya, A. Harries
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The study assessed whether a “7-1-7” timeliness metric for screening and TB preventive therapy (TPT) could be implemented for household contacts (HHCs) of index patients with bacteriologically confirmed pulmonary TB under routine programmatic settings in Kenya.METHODS:
A longitudinal cohort study conducted among index patients and their HHCs in 12 health facilities, Kiambu County, Kenya.RESULTS: Between January and June 2023, 95% of 508 index patients had their HHCs line-listed within 7 days of initiating anti-TB treatment (“First 7”).
In 68% of 1,115 HHCs, screening outcomes were ascertained within 1 day of line-listing (“Next 1”). In 65% of 1,105 HHCs eligible for further evaluation, anti-TB treatment, TPT or a decision for no drugs was made within 7 days of screening (“Second 7”). Altogether, 62%
of screened HHCs started TPT during the “7-1-7” period compared with 58% in a historical cohort. Main barriers to TPT uptake were HHCs not consulting clinicians, HHCs being unwilling to initiate TPT and drug shortages. Healthcare workers felt that a timeliness metric was
valuable for streamlining HHC management and proposed “3-5-7” as a workable alternative.CONCLUSIONS: The national TB programme must generate awareness about TPT, ensure uninterrupted drug supplies and assess whether the “3-5-7” metric can be operationalised.