无准备和无保护:南非开普敦医科毕业生对耐药结核病的知识、态度和做法

Michael J. Harrison, J. Watts, Michael-Jon Rosslee, A. von Delft, H. van der Westhuizen
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摘要

南非是耐药结核病(DR-TB)的高负担国家,其在卫生保健工作者中的死亡率特别高。初级临床医生提供关键的耐药结核病服务,并需要耐药结核病管理和预防方面的培训。本研究旨在调查医学生对耐多药结核病的知识、态度和做法,包括管理、感染控制措施和职业卫生服务。这项在南非开普敦大学进行的横断面、问卷调查研究招募了医学院的大四学生,包括87名参与者。平均耐药结核病知识得分为4.7分(95%置信区间[CI]: 4.42-5.06,最高得分为8分)。学生们报告说,在获得呼吸保护方面存在挑战,一半(47.7%)的学生在需要时很难找到N95呼吸器。据报道,接触耐药结核病很常见。3名学生报告有结核病病史,大约一半(n = 49, 55.9%)在本科学习期间报告个人对活动性耐药结核病的担忧,大多数(n = 80, 91.9%)正确地认为自己与一般人群相比处于更高的风险中。医学院学生目前对他们在南非管理耐药结核病方面的作用没有准备,并且在学习期间对职业病没有保护。这应在本科课程和制定全面的职业健康政策中加以解决。弹性个人防护装备(PPE)供应链、感染控制培训和全面职业卫生支持与耐药结核病和新型病原体(如严重急性呼吸系统综合征冠状病毒2 (SARS-CoV-2))均相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Unprepared and unprotected: Graduating medical students’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding drug-resistant tuberculosis in Cape Town, South Africa
South Africa has a high burden of drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB), which has a particularly high mortality among healthcare workers. Junior clinicians deliver key DR-TB services and require training in DR-TB management and prevention. This study aimed to investigate graduating medical students’ knowledge, attitudes, and practices relating to DR-TB, including management, infection control measures, and occupational health services. This cross-sectional, questionnaire-based study at the University of Cape Town, South Africa, recruited final year medical students and included 87 participants. The mean DR-TB knowledge score was 4.7 points (95% confidence interval [CI]: 4.42–5.06, maximum score 8 points). Students reported challenges in accessing respiratory protection, with half (47.7%) struggling to find an N95 respirator when needed. DR-TB exposure was reportedly common. Three students reported prior TB disease, approximately half (n = 49, 55.9%) reported personal concern of active DR-TB disease during undergraduate studies, and the majority (n = 80, 91.9%) correctly perceived themselves to be at increased risk compared to the general population. Medical students are currently unprepared for their role in managing DR-TB in South Africa and unprotected against occupational illness during their studies. This should be addressed in undergraduate curricula and in establishing comprehensive occupational health policies. Resilient personal protective equipment (PPE) supply chains, infection control training, and comprehensive occupational health support have relevance to both DR-TB and novel pathogens, such as severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2).
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