| Literature DB >> 26807933 |
Beena Elizabeth Thomas1, Poonguzhali Shanmugam1, Muniyandi Malaisamy1, Senthanro Ovung1, Chandra Suresh1, Ramnath Subbaraman2, Srividya Adinarayanan3, Karikalan Nagarajan1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Limited treatment options, long duration of treatment and associated toxicity adversely impact the physical and mental well-being of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) patients. Despite research advances in the microbiological and clinical aspects of MDR-TB, research on the psychosocial context of MDR-TB is limited and less understood.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26807933 PMCID: PMC4726571 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Quality rating system for the psychosocial intervention studies.
| Scales | Scoring | Baral et al. | Kaliakbarova et al. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 (Low) | 1 (Low) | ||
| High = 4 | 4 = Randomization | ||
| High = 3 | 3 = Within subject counterbalanced | ||
| Medium = 2 | 2 = Case control / matching | ||
| Low = 1 | 1 = Quasi-experimental design, arbitrary assignment, sequential cohorts | ||
| Low = 0 | 0 = Violated randomization or non-equivalent groups or pilot intervention | ||
| 1 (High) | 1 (High) | ||
| High = 1 | 1 = Treatment standardized by manual, specific training, content coding, etc. | ||
| Low = 0 | 0 = No standardization of treatment specified | ||
| 1 (Medium) | 2 (High) | ||
| High = 2 | 2 = 85–100% follow-ups complete | ||
| Medium = 1 | 1 = 70–84.9% follow-ups complete | ||
| Low = 0 | 0 = <70% follow-ups complete or longest follow-up < 3 months | ||
| 1 (High) | 1 (High) | ||
| High = 1 | 1- Linked to treatment outcome | ||
| Medium = 0 | 0- Not linked to treatment outcome |
Note: This rating system was only applied to the two intervention studies with an experimental design.
Fig 1Flow diagram indicating the process of selecting the studies for this systematic review on the psychosocial issues associated with MDR-TB.
Fig 2Publications on psychosocial issues of MDR-TB in different regions in different periods.
Observational studies on psychosocial issues of MDR-TB patients.
| Reference | Year | Place | Method | Popn. | Objective | Findings | Implications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isaakidis et al. [ | 2013 | India | Qualitative | 12 | Factors influencing treatment adherence | Patients voiced concerns about stigma, depression, hopelessness about the efficacy of treatment, guilt due to lack of work productivity, lack of emotional support, and the perception that the side effects of medications cause greater suffering than the disease. | Family care givers were crucial in providing emotional and psychological support for the MDR-TB patients. |
| Morris et al. [ | 2013 | Mexico | Qualitative | 12 | Psychological, social & economic effects | Patients reported suffering from stigma, discrimination, voluntary separation from their families, loss of self-identity and self-esteem, financial hardship, and isolation. | Psychological, social, and economic support interventions need to be included as a regular part of MDR-TB care. |
| Kendall et al. [ | 2013 | South Africa | Retrospective | 225 | Risk factors for treatment default | Younger, economically unstable patients, and alcohol and drug users were particularly at risk for default. Formal housing (hazard ratio 0.38) and steady employment (hazard ratio 0.41) were associated with decreased risk of default. | Psychological and socioeconomic support are crucial for improving treatment outcomes, especially formal housing and employment. |
| Baghaei et al. [ | 2011 | Iran | Cohort (Intervention) | 80 | Adverse effects | Patient had a high rate of adverse effects from MDR-TB medications, including neuropsychiatric side effects like depression, altered consciousness, convulsions, and suicide in 7.5%. Patients with neuropsychiatric side effects had a statistically significant less favorable outcome (p = 0.038). | These is an urgent need for strategies to manage adverse effects due to MDR-TB therapy. |
| Sharma et al. [ | 2013 | India | Cross sectional | 60 | The impact on quality of life | The mean quality of life scores for MDR-TB patients were statistically significantly lower across all domains (psychological, social and environmental) when compared to patients with drug-susceptible TB. | MDR-TB patients have a greater need for psychosocial support when compared to patients with drug-susceptible TB. |
| Mauch et al. [ | 2013 | Dominician Republic | Cross sectional | 20 | Costs incurred by MDR-TB patients | MDR-TB patients bore a total financial burden of $412 direct costs and $3,146 indirect costs (total cost $3,558). The direct cost for diagnosis was $154 and for treatment was $258. | MDR-TB patients faced a substantial personal financial burden. |
| Furin et al. [ | 2001 | Lima | Case study | 60 | Psychosocial adverse effects | The baseline depression rate was 50%, and 18.3% and 11.7% of patients newly developed depression or anxiety during the course of treatment, possibly as an adverse effect of medications. | Strategies to manage the neuropsychiatric adverse effects of MDR-TB therapy to increase adherence and treatment completion. |
| Vega et al. [ | 2004 | Lima | Case study | 75 | Prevalence of depression, anxiety, andpsychosis | The baseline prevalence rates of depression and anxiety were 52% and 9%. During treatment, 13%, 12%, and 12% newly developed depression, anxiety, and psychosis respectively. | Continuation of TB drugs and administration of anti-depressant drugs together was thought to be an effective strategy for addressing MDR-TB medication-related psychiatric issues. |
Intervention-based studies addressing psychosocial issues in MDR-TB patients.
| Reference | Year | Place | Method | Popn. | Objective | Findings | Implications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shin et al. [ | 2004 | Lima | Qualitative | 1000 | Community based psychosocial model | Integrated approach with psychosocial, economical and medical support were very effective in controlling the epidemic set a blueprint for “complex health intervention in resource poor settings” | Community based psychosocial interventions for MDR-TB was extremely effective. |
| Chalco et al. [ | 2006 | Lima | Qualitative | 7 Nurses | Emotional support provided by nurses | Patients faced guilt, social stigma, adherence, side effects, socio-economic difficulties, special situations HIV surgery, domestic violence, treatment failure, family support issues for money, fear of return back to normal life post treatment. | Meetings with family, gatherings, therapeutic care and monitoring were effective |
| Acha et al. [ | 2007 | Lima | Qualitative | 285 | Psychosocial support group intervention | Prevalence of stigma, depression, anxiety, suicidal tendencies, treatment side effects, loss productivity, hopelessness MDR treatment. | Group therapy, psychosocial support, recreations, symbolic celebrations and family workshops may be effective interventions; larger randomized trials are needed. |
| Horter et al. [ | 2014 | Uganda | Qualitative(Intervention) | 7 | Acceptability & accessibility of home-based treatment | Home-based care was safe, conducive, psychosocially supportive & provide earning potential | Home based treatment is acceptable by all stake holders |
| Das et al. [ | 2014 | India | Case study | 45 | Psychiatric conditions of HIV/MDR-TB patients | Baseline: Depression16%; (4/7 moderate to severe) After 3 months of therapy 9% no depression. | Individualized psychological & clinical support interventions are strongly recommended. |
| Kaliakbarova et al. [ | 2013 | Kazakhstan | Cohort(Intervention) | 426 | Assess the effects of psychosocial support (PSS) | Pre PSS 23% had interrupted treatment due to financial reasons which reduced to 0.5% post due to alcohol addiction). 94% satisfied with the psychosocial support, 69% mentioned it as important. | PSS programme is successful in reducing default rate |
| Baral et al. [ | 2014 | Nepal | Mixed(Intervention) | 156 | Impact of counseling; counseling with financial support | Extremely vulnerable to stigma and faced financial hardship. MDR-TB cure rate: Counselling 85%; counselling with finance 76%; no support 67% (differences not statistically significant) | Provision of counselling & financial support may increase cure rates given a trend towards statistical significance; however, larger studies are needed. |