| Literature DB >> 25243782 |
Knut Lönnroth1, Philippe Glaziou1, Diana Weil1, Katherine Floyd1, Mukund Uplekar1, Mario Raviglione1.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major global public health problem. In all societies, the disease affects the poorest individuals the worst. A new post-2015 global TB strategy has been developed by WHO, which explicitly highlights the key role of universal health coverage (UHC) and social protection. One of the proposed targets is that "No TB affected families experience catastrophic costs due to TB." High direct and indirect costs of care hamper access, increase the risk of poor TB treatment outcomes, exacerbate poverty, and contribute to sustaining TB transmission. UHC, conventionally defined as access to health care without risk of financial hardship due to out-of-pocket health care expenditures, is essential but not sufficient for effective and equitable TB care and prevention. Social protection interventions that prevent or mitigate other financial risks associated with TB, including income losses and non-medical expenditures such as on transport and food, are also important. We propose a framework for monitoring both health and social protection coverage, and their impact on TB epidemiology. We describe key indicators and review methodological considerations. We show that while monitoring of general health care access will be important to track the health system environment within which TB services are delivered, specific indicators on TB access, quality, and financial risk protection can also serve as equity-sensitive tracers for progress towards and achievement of overall access and social protection.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25243782 PMCID: PMC4171373 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Figure 1Framework to illustrate the interrelationship between universal health coverage, social protection, TB outcomes, and public health and social impact.
Figure 2The three dimensions of universal health coverage, with the added dimension of financial risk protection against non-medical costs.
Adapted from World Health Report 2010 [21]. Elements in red are non-medical costs and additional interventions within health care and beyond to provide financial protection.
Indicative TB-related universal access and social protection indicators and targets.
| Level | Indicator | Definition | Sources | Global Target | Interpretation |
|
| Situation assessment of UHC financing policies and mechanisms done and how TB is addressed within these (Y/N) | Situation assessment includes; (a) population, service and cost coverage assessment; (b) payment mechanisms, conditions for reimbursement, quality standards, and accreditation of providers; (c) the extent to which TB diagnosis and treatment, and related TB care services are covered within revenue generation or insurance packages | NA | % of countries | Situation assessment is essential for planning of TB services and their link with general health services and general health insurance and other health financing schemes |
| Situation assessment done on how TB is addressed within social protection (Y/N) | Situation assessment includes; (a) mapping of any schemes available to those affected by TB (e.g., sickness insurance, disability pension, cash transfer, food assistance, etc.); (b) the intended target groups for the schemes; and (c) how schemes are designed to prevent or mitigate adverse financial and social consequences of TB | NA | % of countries | Situation assessment is essential for planning of TB services, in particular TB patient support interventions, and their link with general social protection schemes | |
|
| Number of TB diagnostic facilities per population |
| NTP management data | Country level only | Sufficient geographical availability of TB diagnostic facilities is essential for early TB diagnosis |
| Number of TB treatment facilities per population |
| NTP management data | Country level only | Sufficient geographical availability of TB treatment services is essential to ensure complete treatment initiation and adherence | |
| Proportion of bacteriologically confirmed TB cases among all newly diagnosed TB cases |
| NTP TB laboratory and treatment register | >90% | A high proportion indicates good diagnostic quality and less risk of false positive diagnosis based on clinical assessment only | |
| Percentage under-reporting of diagnosed cases of TB |
| Record linkageInventory study | <10% cases unreported | This indicator measures TB care coverage in terms of linkage with all relevant public and private health providers diagnosing and treating TB | |
|
| Number of notified TB cases | Number of TB cases notified in a year | TB surveillance system | Country level only | Level and trend should be interpreted in relation to documented efforts to improve access and diagnosis, as well as other epidemiological parameters |
| Ratio of notified cases over estimated incident TB cases in the same year |
| TB surveillance system.WHO TB incidence estimates | As close as possible to 100% | A high proportion can be achieved through a sufficient geographical coverage of TB diagnostic services; general UHC coverage; and availability of appropriate social protection sensitive to TB | |
| Percentage of persons diagnosed with bacteriologically confirmed TB who start TB treatment |
| NTP TB laboratory and treatment registers | 100% | A high proportion can be achieved through a combination of sufficient geographical coverage of TB treatment services; general UHC population, service and cost coverage; and availability of appropriate social protection sensitive to TB | |
| TB treatment success ratio in new TB cases |
| NTP TB treatment register | >90% | A high proportion can be achieved through a combination of sufficient geographical coverage of TB treatment services; general UHC population, service and cost coverage; and availability of appropriate social protection sensitive to TB | |
| Percentage of people with TB with some form of social or economic support benefits |
| NTP register cross-checked with other registers | Country level only | The higher proportion, the better coverage of social protection interventions. However, the appropriate level of coverage is context specific and depends on profile/needs of patients | |
| Percentage of people with TB who face catastrophic costs |
| Periodic surveys of patients receiving care for TB | 0% | Low percent with catastrophic cost means that UHC mechanisms protect people from high direct medical costs and appropriate social protection prevent or mitigate high indirect costs | |
|
| TB Incidence | Surveillance data. Vital statistics. | ↓90% by 2035 | Rate of decline associated with degree of effective UHC and social protection coverage | |
| TB prevalence | Surveys. | Country only | |||
| TB deaths | Modelling | ↓95% by 2035 |
All indicators should be disaggregated by sex and age.
Should be disaggregated for drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB.
These indicators should be disaggregated by age, sex, and socioeconomic status, or in the case of geographical coverage mapped against poverty mapping.
NTP, national tuberculosis programme; NA, not applicable.
TB indicators mapped against the preferred attributes of intervention coverage indicators for general universal health coverage monitoring [49].
| Preferred Attribute | Assessment for TB | Comment |
| Is a health priority based on burden of disease addressed by an intervention | Yes | TB is a leading cause of death and morbidity, especially among the poorest in the poorest countries |
| Is it a cost-effective intervention | Yes | TB diagnosis and treatment are among the most cost-effective public health interventions ever documented |
| Includes a measure of quality (sometimes referred to as “effective coverage”) | Yes | There are several robust quality indicators, including diagnostic quality, verified treatment results, and case fatality |
| Credible methods exist to identify the population needing the intervention, i.e., the denominator | Partly | This is the most challenging aspect of TB coverage monitoring since the true TB incidence is difficult to measure directly. However, in settings where UHC exists and under-reporting is minimal, TB notifications provide a good proxy of TB incidence. Population prevalence is directly measurable in the highest burden countries and the TB death rate is, in principle, measurable in all countries through improved vital registration. |
| Credible methods exist to identify the population receiving the intervention, i.e., the numerator | Yes | The information about number of people receiving quality-assured TB treatment is readily available in almost every country |
| Can be routinely measured: health management information systems or periodic household survey | Yes | There is an internationally recommended standard TB information system that is used in almost all countries |
| Equity disaggregation is possible by household wealth/income, gender, residence, and other key stratifiers | Yes | Disaggregation by age, sex, and geographical area is available from standard records. Additional disaggregations require research with special data collection |
| Measureable in comparable way across countries | Yes | TB case definition, diagnostic quality, treatment regimens, and treatment outcomes are internationally standardised |