| Literature DB >> 29108007 |
Mari Armstrong-Hough1,2, Patricia Turimumahoro1, Amanda J Meyer1,2, Emmanuel Ochom1, Diana Babirye1, Irene Ayakaka1, David Mark1, Joseph Ggita1, Adithya Cattamanchi1,3, David Dowdy1,4, Frank Mugabe5, Elizabeth Fair3, Jessica E Haberer6, Achilles Katamba1,7, J Lucian Davis1,2,8.
Abstract
SETTING: Seven public tuberculosis (TB) units in Kampala, Uganda, where Uganda's national TB program recently introduced household contact investigation, as recommended by 2012 guidelines from WHO.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29108007 PMCID: PMC5673209 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0187145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow diagram describing the evaluation cascade for index TB patients.
The figure presents the steps of the evaluation cascade for index TB patients, with the target population identified in bold font. All percentages are calculated as a proportion of the number of participants entering the previous step of the cascade. Abbreviations: CI, contact investigation; MDR, multi-drug-resistant; TB, tuberculosis.
Characteristics of index TB patients and their households.
| Characteristic | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Men | 53 (56%) |
| HIV-seropositive | 29 (31%) |
| Age groups | |
| Adults (≥15 years) | 92 (97%) |
| Older children (5–14 years) | 2 (2%) |
| Younger children (0–4 years) | 1 (1%) |
| >1 household | 6 (6%) |
| Number of contacts (range) | |
| Reported | 3 (1–25) |
| Screened for TB | 2 (1–12) |
| Cough duration, weeks (25th-75th %ile) | 8 (4–12) |
| Microbiologically confirmed | 94 (99%) |
| Weekly income in USD (IQR) | $15.40 ($5.60 - $28.10) |
| Weekly expenditure in USD (IQR) | $8.40 ($4.20 - $19.60) |
| Number of rooms (range) | 2 (1–10) |
| Literacy, head of household | 62 (95%b) |
| Underwent >1 visit to household | 13 (12%) |
| Indications for TB evaluation | |
| ≥1 contact with TB symptoms | 55 (51%) |
| ≥1 child contact under 5 | 43 (40%) |
| ≥1 HIV-seropositive contact | 7 (7%) |
Legend: Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding.
a Table values are median (range or interquartile range, as specified) for continuous variables and n (column %) for categorical variables.
b Due to missing demographic data for nine index patients, Table 1 describes an analytic sample of 95 index patients contributing 101 households.
c Missing n = 30
d Missing n = 52
e Missing n = 30
f Among contacts. Abbreviations: IQR, interquartile range; TB, tuberculosis; USD, US dollars
Fig 2Flow diagram describing the evaluation cascade for household contacts.
The figure presents the steps of the evaluation cascade for household contacts, with the target population identified in bold font below the pre-screening population. All percentages are calculated as a proportion of the number of participants entering the previous step of the cascade. Abbreviations: CI, contact investigation; TB, tuberculosis.
Characteristics of household contacts.
| Characteristic | Household Contacts |
|---|---|
| Male gender | 94 (37%) |
| Age groups | |
| Adults (≥15 years) | 143 (56%) |
| Older children (5–14 years) | 55 (22%) |
| Younger children (0–4 years) | 58 (23%) |
| Known HIV-seropositive | 14 (6%) |
| Symptoms of TB | |
| Cough of any duration | 88 (34%) |
| Cough ≥2 weeks | 63 (25%) |
| Subjective fever | 31 (12%) |
| Night sweats | 29 (11%) |
| Weight loss | 34 (13%) |
Legend: Percentages may not sum to 100% due to rounding.
a Table values are n (column %) for categorical variables.
Abbreviations: TB, tuberculosis.
Reasons for incomplete home visits.
| Reason for incomplete home visit | Households |
|---|---|
| Index patient left household | 10 (24%) |
| Contacts reported being too busy | 10 (24%) |
| Contacts refused | 5 (12%) |
| Other | 5 (12%) |
| Index patient provided a wrong phone number | 4 (10%) |
| Index patient reported being too busy | 4 (10%) |
| Index patient changed mind | 2 (5%) |
| Index patient died | 2 (5%) |
Legend:
a This table describes a sequential sample of 42 index patients who completed the index patient interview and planned to have a home visit, but whose households were never visited.
b Two were not followed up by lay health workers following an error with their tablets. One went to prison. One turned off his phone each time he saw the lay health worker calling. One decided not to tell the other members of the household.