| Literature DB >> 28274245 |
Irene Ayakaka1, Sara Ackerman2, Joseph M Ggita1, Phoebe Kajubi3, David Dowdy4, Jessica E Haberer5, Elizabeth Fair6, Philip Hopewell6, Margaret A Handley7,8, Adithya Cattamanchi6, Achilles Katamba9, J Lucian Davis10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization recommends routine household tuberculosis contact investigation in high-burden countries but adoption has been limited. We sought to identify barriers to and facilitators of TB contact investigation during its introduction in Kampala, Uganda.Entities:
Keywords: Behavior Change Wheel framework; COM-B model; Household contact investigation; Implementation science; Lay health workers; Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28274245 PMCID: PMC5343292 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-017-0561-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Principal stakeholders, activities, and individual behaviors involved in household TB contact investigation
| Stakeholders | Activities | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Arrange household visits | Visit households to screen contacts | Evaluate contacts in clinics | |
| Clinic-staff | Identify index patients | Evaluate referred contacts | |
| Educate index patients | Perform diagnostic testing | ||
| Obtain list of household contacts | Prescribe treatment | ||
| Lay health workers (LHWs) | Schedule a time for the visit | Educate household contacts | |
| Obtain directions to the household | Interview household contacts | ||
| Refer eligible contacts to clinic | |||
| Index patient | Consent or not to household visit | ||
| Provide directions to the household | |||
| Household contacts | Consent to screening | Visit clinic after being referred | |
| Accept or not accept TB education | |||
| Answer TB screening questions |
Barriers and facilitators of key household TB contact investigation activities in terms of their behavioral determinants
| Behavioral determinant | Arranging home visits | Visiting households to screen contacts | Evaluating contacts in clinics |
|---|---|---|---|
| A. Barriers | |||
| Capabilitya | |||
| Psychological | Lack of TB knowledge among contacts | Lack of local contact investigation guidelines | |
| Language barrier for LHWs and contacts | |||
| Physical | |||
| Opportunityb | |||
| Physical | Insufficient personnel at TB unit | Difficulty locating households | Lack of funds for travel for contacts |
| Lack of dedicated clinic space for TB care | Difficulty finding contacts at home | ||
| Social | Stigma felt by index patients | Avoidant behaviors of contacts | Stigma felt by contacts |
| Motivationc | |||
| Automatic | Fear of getting TB among clinic staff | Fear of TB diagnosis among contacts | |
| Reflective | Distrust of clinic- staff among contacts | ||
| B. Facilitators | |||
| Capability | |||
| Psychological | Interpersonal skills of LHWs | ||
| Ability of LHWs to persuade index patients | |||
| Physical | |||
| Opportunity | |||
| Physical | Task shifting to LHWs | Flexible scheduling of home evaluation | Streamlining contact evaluation at clinic |
| Communication with patients via mobile phones | Fare for transport of LHWs to homes | Family physical support for contacts | |
| Social | Trust between index patients and LHWs | Trust between contacts and LHWs | Family social support for contacts |
| Privacy provided by home evaluation | |||
| Motivation | |||
| Automatic | |||
| Reflective | Personalizability of home visit | ||
| Pay for LHWs | |||
Abbreviations: COM-B Capability, Opportunity, Motivation Determine Behavior Model, LHWs lay health workers, TB tuberculosis
aCapability represents the faculty to engage in a behavior and has a “physical” domain (e.g., strength, skills, stamina) and a “psychological” domain (e.g., knowledge, memory)
bOpportunity represents environmental factors that affect the capability to perform the behavior and has a “physical” domain (e.g., time, physical environment) and a “social” domain (e.g., interpersonal influences, social cues, cultural norms).
cMotivation represents the internal factors that allow one to employ capability and opportunity to perform a behavior, and has a “reflective” domain (e.g., beliefs and intentions) and an “automatic” domain (e.g., wants, needs, impulses)
Investigator-identified Intervention functions targeting identified barriers and facilitators as defined in the Behavioral Change Wheel framework
| Intervention Functions | Arranging home visits | Visiting households to screen contacts | Evaluating contacts in clinics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Education | LHWs use their lay understanding of community knowledge gaps and concerns to counsel patients | ||
| Training | |||
| Persuasion | LHWs establish trust with index patients | ||
| LHWs convince index patients to accept CI | |||
| Environmental restructuring | Home visit allows scheduling flexibility | Clinic-staff streamline clinic visits for contacts | |
| Enablement | LHWs give social support to index patients | Home visit provides privacy | Families support contacts physically |
| Clinic-staff shift task of visiting home to LHWs | Contacts trust LHWs | Families support contacts emotionally | |
| CHWs call index patients on mobile phones | |||
| Modeling | Former TB patients recount their experiences in referring their contacts | ||
| Incentivization | Clinic funds LHW transport fare | Home visit eliminates some clinic visits | Clinic-staff streamline clinic visits for contacts |
| Clinic or program pays LHWs for their work | |||
| Restriction | |||
| Coercion |
Abbreviations: LHWs lay health workers, CI contact investigation, TB tuberculosis
Summary of modifiable barriers and selected linked intervention functions
Legend: Shaded cells identify intervention functions that best target the identified barriers, after applying the Behavior Change Wheel framework.
Summary of selected facilitators and linked intervention functions
Legend: Shaded cells identify intervention functions that best target the identified facilitators, after applying the Behavior Change Wheel framework