| Literature DB >> 24349284 |
Bruno Abarca Tomás1, Christopher Pell2, Aurora Bueno Cavanillas3, José Guillén Solvas3, Robert Pool2, María Roura4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The re-emergence of tuberculosis (TB) in low-incidence countries and its disproportionate burden on immigrants is a public health concern posing specific social and ethical challenges. This review explores perceptions, knowledge, attitudes and treatment adherence behaviour relating to TB and their social implications as reported in the qualitative literature.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24349284 PMCID: PMC3857814 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0082440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The database searches.
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| #1 "Tuberculosis"[Mesh] OR tb OR tuberculosis. #2 "Transients and Migrants"[Mesh] OR "Emigration and Immigration"[Mesh] OR "Refugees"[Mesh] OR immigrant* OR migrant* OR migrat* OR refugee* OR foreign. #3 "Qualitative Research"[Mesh] OR "Anthropology"[Mesh] OR "Ethnology"[Mesh] OR qualitative OR "Behavior"[Mesh]. |
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| TITLE-ABS-KEY. #1 tb OR tuberculosis. #2 transient* OR migrant* OR migrat* OR emigration OR immigration OR refugee OR refugees OR foreign. #3 qualitative OR anthropology OR ethnology OR behavior. #1 |
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| #1 tb OR tuberculosis. #2 transient* OR migrant* OR migrat* OR emigration OR immigration OR refugee OR refugees OR foreign. #3 qualitative OR anthropology OR ethnology OR behavior. |
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Figure 1The study selection process.
Details of the included studies.
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| 1 | US | AhChing et al, 2001 [23]. | Focus group. | 1 with 8 Samoan immigrants in Hawaii, TB patients or with latent TB, identified in a health centre. |
| 2 | US | Ailinger et al, 1997 [31]. | Individual interviews. | 65 Latin American immigrants (mainly from El Salvador), ill with TB in treatment. Identified through clinics and screening programmes. |
| 3 | US | Ho, 2003 [42]. | Individual interviews. | 60 Chinese immigrants ill with TB, in treatment. Identified in clinics or DOT program. |
| 4 | US | Ho, 2004 [4]. | Case study. | 1 female Chinese immigrant, TB patient. |
| Participant observation, structured questionnaires, illness narratives, reviews of medical records and analysis of epidemiological data. | Five groups of informants are included: public health workers, Chinatown biomedical doctors, Chinatown’s practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine, Chinese laborers and Chinese tuberculosis patients. | |||
| 5 | US | Houston et al, 2002 [35]. | Individual interviews. | 14 Vietnamese immigrants with latent TB, ill with TB (in treatment or not), or with TB in the past; key informants. Identified through health services and organizations. (and 18 follow-up telephone interviews) |
| Focus groups. | 8 with Vietnamese immigrants with latent TB, ill with TB (in treatment or not), or with TB in the past and key informants. Identified through health services and organizations (53 participants). | |||
| Community surveys. | 510 Vietmanese immigrants. | |||
| 6 | US | Ito, 1999 [45]. | Individual interviews. | 24 Vietnamese refugees ill with TB and community members, and staff from the clinic. Identified in the social health department. |
| Focus groups. | 1 with 12 Vietnamese refugees. | |||
| Participant observation. | In the main county public health clinic. | |||
| 7 | US | Joseph et al, 2008 [36]. | Individual interviews. | 50 Mexican immigrants identified in clinics after TB screening and adjacent communities, healthy individuals, latent TB and TB patients. |
| 8 | US | McEwen, 2005 [38]. | Individual interviews. | 9 Mexican immigrants diagnosed with latent TB and 5 of their partners. Identified in a TB clinic. |
| Participant observation, demographic questionnaire and review of medical records. | In participants’ homes, TB clinics and various health care settings on both sides of the border. | |||
| 9 | US | McEwen et al, 2007 [39]. | Individual interviews. | 8 female immigrants from Mexico with latent TB in risk of therapeutic failure. |
| Participant observation. | In the TB clinic and in the participants’ homes. | |||
| 10 | US | Poss, 1998 [30]. | Individual interviews. | 18 healthy Mexican farm immigrants (participants in a TB education program), identified in their household. Other 8 participated informally. |
| 11 | US | Wieland et al, 2012 [21]. | Focus groups. | 6 with healthy immigrants and refugees from Latin America, Africa and Asia, identified in an education centre (54 participants). 4 with staff from the education centre (29 participants, 10 of which immigrant). |
| 12 | US | Wyss et al, 2006 [47]. | Individual interviews. | 28 Latin American farm immigrants with latent TB identified after diagnosis. |
| Ethnographic observation. | In four commercial farms in Midwestern United States. | |||
| 13 | US | Yamada et al, 1999 [28]. | Focus groups. | 4 with Filipino immigrants, TB patients and healthy, identified from community health centres (36 participants). |
| 14 | New Zealand | Coreil et al, 2004 [34]. | Focus groups. | 5 with Haitian immigrants with HIV and TB, identified through the local health department (unknown exact number of participants). |
| 15 | New Zealand | Ng Shiu et al, 2008 [41]. | Individual interviews. | 11 Samoan (and Pacific Island) immigrants, TB patients identified in health centres. |
| Focus groups. | 2 with 12 Samoan community members who were not TB patients nor related to any TB patients. | |||
| Informal discussions. | With health professionals. | |||
| 16 | New Zealand | Van der Oest, 2005 [40]. | Individual interviews. | 7 representatives from seven main minority populations. Identified through a list of contacts. From Cambodia, China, Philippines, Samoa, Somalia Asia and Somalia, as well as Cook Islands and the Maori community. |
| 17 | UK | Brewin et al, 2006 [29]. | Individual interviews. | 53 African, Asian, Latin American and European immigrants identified in a social services centre, a clinic and health centre from TB screening. |
| Focus groups. | 1 with 4 African patients. | |||
| 18 | UK | Johnson, 2006 [25]. | Focus groups. | 9 with immigrants mainly from Vietnam, Somalia, China, Zimbabwe, and other African or Asian countries, identified in health services and organizations. |
| Individual interviews. | 1 of the groups had individual interviews instead focus group discussion (combining focus groups and individual interviews, there were 67 participants). | |||
| 19 | UK | Nnoaham et al, 2006 [33]. | Individual interviews. | 16 African immigrants, attending a clinic for TB treatment. |
| 20 | Canada | Bender et al, 2010 [43]. | Individual interviews. | 7 patients from TB centres and social services, mostly immigrants from diverse origins, and 9 Canadian female nurses. |
| Observation. | Observation of the visits between 9 nurses and 24 clients. | |||
| 21 | Canada | Gibson et al, 2005 [37]. | Individual interviews. | 133 immigrants from Asia and Eastern Europe identified from a TB clinic and aboriginals identified in the health centre. In treatment, prophylaxis, refusing prophylaxis or with personal or family history of TB. |
| 22 | China | Long et al, 2008 [44]. | Individual interviews. | 20 rural-to-urban migrant and permanent resident TB suspects identified from a cohort study, 17 TB patients and 23 key informants. |
| Focus group. | 12 with rural-to-urban migrants in the general population (unknown number of participants). | |||
| Prospective cohort study. | Adult suspect TB patients, migrant and urban residents. | |||
| 23 | China | Wei et al, 2009 [46]. | Individual interviews. | 34 rural-to-urban migrant TB patients, identified from a TB program. |
| 24 | Kazakhstan | Huffman et al, 2012 [22]. | Individual interviews. | 10 Uzbek migrant TB patients (identified from patients’ lists) and 18 health workers. |
| Focus groups. | 8 with Uzbek labor migrants and 4 with returned migrants in Uzbekistan. | |||
| 25 | Nepal | Kirwan et al, 2009 [32]. | Individual interviews. | 14 male rural-to-urban migrant TB patients, identified by health personnel in clinics. |
| 26 | Norway | Sagbakken et al, 2010 [26]. | Individual interviews. | 22 immigrant TB patients from Somalia and Ethiopia. Identified through primary health centres and hospitals. |
| 27 | Oman | AlManiri et al, 2010 [48]. | Individual interviews. | 17 health care providers, identified through direct referrals, with TB experience. The immigrant community was mainly from the Indian Subcontinent. |
| 28 | Spain | Blasco et al, 2010 [24]. | Individual interviews. | 45 immigrants ill with TB currently or previously, from various countries. Identified through the health services. |
| 29 | Sweden | Kulane et al, 2010 [49]. | Focus groups. | 5 with 34 Somali immigrants, TB patients. Men and women from social centres, mosques and community organizations. |
| 30 | Switzerland | Tardin et al, 2009 [27]. | Individual interviews. | 3, one immigrant TB patient, an interpreter and a cultural mediator. |
| Genotyping, contact tracing and literature review. |