| Literature DB >> 27465783 |
Shona Horter1, Beverley Stringer2, Jane Greig2, Akhmet Amangeldiev3, Mirzagaleb N Tillashaikhov4, Nargiza Parpieva4, Zinaida Tigay5, Philipp du Cros2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Treatment for multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) is lengthy, has severe side effects, and raises adherence challenges. In the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and Ministry of Health (MoH) programme in Karakalpakstan, Uzbekistan, a region with a high burden of MDR-TB, patient loss from treatment (LFT) remains high despite adherence support strategies. While certain factors associated with LFT have been identified, there is limited understanding of why some patients are able to adhere to treatment while others are not. We conducted a qualitative study to explore patients' experiences with MDR-TB treatment, with the aim of providing insight into the barriers and enablers to treatment-taking to inform future strategies of adherence support.Entities:
Keywords: Adherence; Autonomy; Drugs; MDR-TB; Multi-drug resistant tuberculosis; Qualitative study; Side effects
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27465783 PMCID: PMC4964095 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-016-1723-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Patient participant characteristics
| Patient code | Gender | Age group (years) | Treatment-taking profile at time of interview | Treatment history |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| P01 | Female | 20–29 | Partially adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P02 & P02 FU | Female | 20–29 | LFT | Extensive (DS to DR) |
| P03 & P03 FU | Female | 20–29 | Partially adherent | Extensive (DS to DR) |
| P04 | Male | 20–29 | Adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P05 | Male | 40–49 | Adherent | Tx after LFT from SCR |
| P06 | Male | 20–29 | Partially adherent | Previous incomplete DS tx |
| P07 | Female | 20–29 | LFT | Previous incomplete DS tx |
| P08 | Male | 50–59 | Partially adherent | Previous incomplete DS tx |
| P09 | Female | 20–29 | Partially adherent | Previous incomplete DS tx |
| P10 | Male | 20–29 | Adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P11 | Female | 20–29 | Adherent | Relapse |
| P12 | Female | 60–69 | Adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P13 | Female | 20–29 | Adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P14 | Female | 20–29 | Partially adherent | Relapse |
| P15 | Male | 30–39 | Adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P16 | Male | 20–29 | Partially adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P17 | Male | 40–49 | Adherent | Extensive (DS to DR) |
| P18 & P18 FU | Female | 20–29 | Adherent | Extensive (DS to DR) |
| P19 | Male | 16–20 | Partially adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P20 | Male | 20–29 | Adherent | Relapse |
| P21 | Male | 20–29 | Adherent | Relapse |
| P22 | Male | 20–29 | Adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P23 & P23 FU | Male | 16–20 | Adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P24 | Female | 30–39 | LFT | 1 previous course (failure after amplification) |
| P25 | Female | 20–29 | LFT | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P26 | Female | 60–69 | LFT | 1 previous course (failure after amplification) |
| P27 | Female | 60–69 | LFT | 1 previous course |
| P28 | Male | 20–29 | Partially adherent | Relapse |
| P29 | Male | 30–39 | LFT | Relapse |
| P30 | Female | 30–39 | Partially adherent | Unknown |
| P31 | Female | 20–29 | Partially adherent | Unknown |
| P32 | Male | 30–39 | LFT | 2 previous courses |
| P33 | Female | 30–39 | Partially adherent | New pt (no prior tx history) |
| P34 | Female | 30–39 | Adherent | 1 previous course |
| P35 | Female | 30–39 | Adherent | 2 previous courses |
FU follow-up interview, Tx treatment, Pt patient, LFT lost from treatment, DS drug sensitive, DR drug resistant, SCR short-course regimen (9 month MDR-TB treatment regimen being piloted)
Health practitioner participant characteristics
| HP position | Number of participants | Number of interviews |
|---|---|---|
| Counsellor | 5 | 5 |
| Nurse | 5 | 6 (including 1 FU) |
| Doctor | 2 | 2 |
HP health practitioner, FU follow-up interview
N.B. health practitioner positions have not been given for each participant code to protect confidentiality of participants, due to the small number of health practitioners for certain positions
Coding framework after reduction of codes and categories
| Theme | Supporting treatment-taking | Undermining treatment-taking |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Hope and quality knowledge | -Acceptance of diagnosis | -Doubt, disbelief, shock, denial |
| 2. Patient autonomy and control | -Ownership and self-responsibility | -Conflicting priorities |
| 3. Perceptions of self, body, Tx and disease on Tx tolerance | -Coping mechanisms | -Drug side effects |
Tx treatment, HP health practitioner
| Policy and Practice Recommendations: towards enhancing the patient-centred approach | |
| Patient knowledge, understanding and hope | Increase the availability of information to patients at different stages of the treatment course (beyond point of diagnosis) |
| Patient autonomy and control over treatment-taking | Practitioner-patient relationships should facilitate dialogue so patients feel able to discuss any challenges, concerns and queries they might have |
| Patient perceptions of the self, body, treatment and disease on tolerance – drug side effects | Offer support for patients around mind set and treatment-taking – as focusing on positives and seeing treatment as strength-giving was found to offer the potential to ease difficult drug side effects |