| Literature DB >> 21172015 |
Raffael Ayé1, Kaspar Wyss, Hanifa Abdualimova, Sadullo Saidaliev.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis (TB) control is based on early detection and complete treatment of infectious cases. Consequently, it is important that TB suspects and patients can readily access medical care. This qualitative study investigated determinants of access to DOTS services as identified by patients, health providers and community members in four districts in Tajikistan.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21172015 PMCID: PMC3022814 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-3-340
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Analytical framework used in this study for factors influencing access to care†
| Main categories | Affordability | Acceptability | Accessibility* | Adequacy* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sub-categories (and examples) | ▪ Missed opportunities (lost income due to inability to work) | ▪ Side effects of treatment | ▪ Distance to facility (effort to cover distance, time needed) | ▪ Organisational appropriateness of services |
| ▪ Medical costs (costs for diagnostic tests, drugs, etc.) | ▪ Perceived quality of care (technical specialisation of providers) | ▪ Physical state and cleanliness of facilities | ||
| ▪ Non-medical costs (transportation costs, expenditure for disease-related diets, etc.) | ▪ Attitude of providers (friendliness of doctors) | ▪ Convenient opening hours | ||
| ▪ Lack of confidentiality (other community members find out about TB patient) | ||||
| ▪ Health beliefs (lack of belief in curability) |
†Adapted from reference 20.
*In the participatory approach, factors relating to accessibility and adequacy were not regarded as important (no chickpeas allocated) and the results are presented without these factors.
Eligibility criteria and stratification for the 13 focus group discussions, by respondent category
| Community members | Patients | Providers |
|---|---|---|
| 1) Women from small rural town | 1) Women in treatment | 1) Family doctors from Danghara |
| 2) Men from remote rural village | 2) Men in treatment | 2) Nurses from Varzob |
| 3) Women from rural village | 3) Women and men after treatment success | 3) Family doctors from Shahrinaw and Tursunzoda |
| 4) Men from rural village | 4) Defaulters and patients indicating irregular drug intake | 4) TB specialists from all four districts |
| 5) Women from semi-urban centre |
Figure 1Frequency of statements referring to three components of access to care.
Figure 2Relative importance of different barriers to tuberculosis treatment, measured by the proportion of chickpeas allocated by participants of FGDs.
Figure 3Relative importance of financial factors regarding access to TB services, measured by the proportion of chickpeas allocated by participants of FGDs.