| Literature DB >> 29117349 |
Enos Masini1, Christy Hanson2,3, Jeremiah Ogoro1, Jessie Brown4, Faith Ngari1, Pia Mingkwan2, Julia Makayova2, Mike Osberg4.
Abstract
Background: A recent tuberculosis prevalence survey in Kenya found that the country is home to nearly twice as many patients with tuberculosis as previously estimated. Kenya has prioritized identifying and treating the unnotified or missing cases of tuberculosis. This requires a better understanding of patient care seeking and system weaknesses.Entities:
Keywords: Tuberculosis; care seeking; diagnostic; patient-pathway analysis; private sector; public sector; treatment services
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29117349 PMCID: PMC5854007 DOI: 10.1093/infdis/jix381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Infect Dis ISSN: 0022-1899 Impact factor: 5.226
Primary Data Sources for the Patient-Pathway Analysis (PPA)
| PPA Component and Subcomponent(s) | Data Source |
|---|---|
| No. of facilities | |
| Includes formal private and public facilitiesa | 2016 Kenya Master Health Facility List [12] |
| Place of initial care seeking | |
| Where respondents sought care for tuberculosis and other respiratory illnesses | 2013 Kenya Household Expenditure and Utilization Survey [ |
| Patients who sought care for antenatal HIV test (proxy for tuberculosis) | 2014 Demographic and Health Survey [ |
| Tuberculosis diagnostic availability at initial care seeking | |
| Smear microscopy | 2016 Laboratory Records, National Tuberculosis, Leprosy and Lung Disease Program [ |
| Xpert machine and Xpert referral | 2016 Xpert test records, National Tuberculosis, Leprosy and Lung Disease Program [ |
| Radiography | 2013 Service Availability and Readiness Assessment Mapping [15] |
| Tuberculosis treatment availability at initial care seeking | |
| Any tuberculosis drugs available | 2013 Service Availability and Readiness Assessment Mapping [15] |
Abbreviations: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; KHHEUS, Kenya Household Expenditure and Utilization Survey.
aNo data were available on the no. of informal private facilities.
Health Facility Categorization
| Data Source, Health Facility Type | Health Facility Sector | Health Facility Level |
|---|---|---|
| 2016 Kenya Master Health Facility List | ||
| Not available | Informal private | 2 |
| Not available | Informal private | 1 |
| Private primary care hospital | Formal private | 4 |
| Private secondary care hospital | Formal private | 4 |
| Private basic primary health care facility | Formal private | 3 |
| Private comprehensive primary health care facility | Formal private | 3 |
| Farewell home | Formal private | 3 |
| Private administrative office | Formal private | 2 |
| Private dispensary and outpatient-only clinic | Formal private | 2 |
| Private laboratory | Formal private | 2 |
| Radiology clinic | Formal private | 1 |
| Private voluntary counseling and testing center | Formal private | 1 |
| Public teaching and referral hospital | Public | 5 |
| Public hospital | Public | 4 |
| Public primary care hospital | Public | 4 |
| Public secondary care hospital | Public | 4 |
| Public basic primary health care facility | Public | 3 |
| Public comprehensive primary health care facility | Public | 3 |
| Regional blood transfusion center | Public | 3 |
| Public administrative office | Public | 2 |
| Public dispensaries and clinic outpatient only | Public | 2 |
| Public laboratory | Public | 2 |
| Blood bank | Public | 1 |
| Public voluntary counseling and testing center | Public | 1 |
| 2013 Household Health Expenditure and Utilization Survey | ||
| Chemist facility, pharmacy, shop | Informal private | 2 |
| Community pharmacy | Informal private | 2 |
| Other | Informal private | 1 |
| Traditional, religious, cultural healer facilities | Informal private | 1 |
| Village health worker (TBA, CHW) facility | Informal private | 1 |
| Mission hospital | Formal private | 4 |
| Private hospital | Formal private | 4 |
| Mission health center | Formal private | 3 |
| Nursing, maternity homes | Formal private | 3 |
| Company, parastatal clinics | Formal private | 2 |
| Mission dispensary | Formal private | 2 |
| Nongovernmental organization clinic | Formal private | 2 |
| Private clinic | Formal private | 2 |
| Government hospital | Public | 4 |
| Government health center | Public | 3 |
| Government dispensary | Public | 2 |
| Not available | Public | 1 |
| 2014 Demographic and Health Survey | ||
| Shop | Informal private | 2 |
| Pharmacy | Informal private | 1 |
| Relative, friend | Informal private | 1 |
| Traditional practitioner | Informal private | 1 |
| Mission hospital, clinic | Formal private | 4 |
| Private hospital, clinic | Formal private | 4 |
| Not available | Formal private | 3 |
| Not available | Formal private | 2 |
| Mobile clinic | Formal private | 1 |
| Other private sector | Formal private | 1 |
| Private doctor | Formal private | 1 |
| Government hospital | Public | 4 |
| Government health center | Public | 3 |
| Government dispensary | Public | 2 |
| Community health worker | Public | 1 |
| Other public sector | Public | 1 |
| 2016 TIBU Patient Treatment Records | ||
| Private hospital | Formal private | 4 |
| Private health center | Formal private | 3 |
| Private maternity home | Formal private | 3 |
| Private nursing home | Formal private | 3 |
| Private clinic | Formal private | 2 |
| Private dispensary | Formal private | 2 |
| Foundation | Formal private | 2 |
| Private voluntary counseling and testing center | Formal private | 1 |
| Private SWOP | Formal private | 1 |
| Teaching and referral hospital | Public | 5 |
| Public hospital (non–level 5) | Public | 4 |
| Public health center | Public | 3 |
| Public maternity home | Public | 3 |
| Public nursing home | Public | 3 |
| Public dispensary | Public | 2 |
| Rural health training center | Public | 2 |
| Rural health demonstration center | Public | 2 |
| Public voluntary counseling and testing center | Public | 1 |
| Public SWOP | Public | 1 |
Abbreviation: CHW, community health worker; SWOP, sex workers operation project; TBA, traditional birth attendant.
Figure 1.Patient-pathway visual at the national level. The patient pathway describes the care-seeking patterns of patients and how those patients may intersect with tuberculosis services. Column 1 identifies the sectors and levels of the health system, followed by the estimated number of health facilities at each sector and level, according to the 2016 Kenya Master Health Facility List (FML) for Kenya [12]. The percentage next to each sector title is the share of patients who initiate care seeking in this sector. The final part of column 1 shows the percentage of patients seeking care at each sector and level among participants in the 2013 Kenya Household Health Expenditure and Utilization Survey (KHHEUS) who sought care for tuberculosis and/or respiratory illness in the 4 weeks preceding the survey [15]. Three of Kenya’s 47 counties—Garissa, Mandera, and Wajir—were excluded from the KHHEUS and are not reflected in the national pathway. Column 2 shows the percentage of health facilities that have tuberculosis diagnostic tools across each sector and level of the health system. Data on radiography coverage are from 2013 Kenya Service Availability and Readiness Assessment Mapping (SARAM) records [17]. Smear microscopy coverage reflects National Tuberculosis, Leprosy, and Lung Disease Program laboratory records [17]. GeneXpert system and GeneXpert referral coverage reflect national GeneXpert test records (19). Diagnostic tools are separated by tools for diagnosing drug-susceptible tuberculosis and those for diagnosing drug-resistant tuberculosis. Column 3 shows the estimated percentage of patients likely to access a facility with a tuberculosis diagnostic tool on their initial visit to a health care facility, per the care-seeking patterns reflected in the KHHEUS. Data in column 3 were calculated in 2 stages. First, where possible (for 27% of KHHEUS care seekers), the facilities reportedly visited were matched by name to facilities from the FML, and the proportion of care seekers who accessed a facility with any tuberculosis diagnostic tool at initial care-seeking was calculated. Second, for the remainder of care seekers whose place of initial care seeking was not matched by name to the FML, access to diagnosis was estimated on the basis of diagnostic services coverage (columns 2a and 2b) at the health sector and level where they reportedly sought care. By multiplying the proportion of care seekers at each level by the diagnostic coverage at that level (among facilities that were not matched to care seekers in the first stage), the percentage of care seekers who accessed a facility with any diagnostic tool at the initial point of care seeking was estimated. Column 3 reflects the sum of stages 1 and 2—the total proportion of care seekers estimated to have accessed any diagnostic tool at initial care seeking. Columns 3 and 5 separate public and private sectors on the basis of each sector’s contribution to tuberculosis services access at initial care seeking. Column 4 shows the percentage of health facilities that have tuberculosis treatment, reflecting the availability of any tuberculosis drugs when the 2013 SARAM data were collected. Column 5 shows the estimated percentage of patients likely to access tuberculosis treatment at initial care seeking, per KHHEUS care-seeking patterns. Column 5 was calculated in 2 stages in the same manner as in column 3. Column 6 shows which sectors and levels provided case notification, and data were calculated as a share of the overall estimated incidence in 2015. Column 7 shows the treatment outcome of notified cases among the overall estimated incidence for 2015. Data on notification source and treatment outcomes reflect NTLP records [8]. Columns may not add to 100%, owing to rounding. For more details on the data sources used in the pathway, see the Supplementary Materials.
Figure 2.Care-seeking patterns, by county. In addition to the national-level patient-pathway analysis, the patient-pathway analysis was completed at the subnational level for each of the 47 counties in Kenya. The figure depicts the diversity of care-seeking patterns across each of these counties. Care-seeking data for 44 of 47 counties was provided by a question in the 2013 Kenya Household Health Expenditure and Utilization Survey (HHEUS) that asked participants where they sought care for tuberculosis and other respiratory illnesses [13]. The HHEUS was missing data for 3 counties. Data for these counties were provided by the 2014 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS), which asked patients where they sought care for a human immunodeficiency virus test [14]. Each of these care-seeking data sets was categorized to common sector and level categories as described in this articles.
Figure 3.Patient-pathway visual for urban (A) and rural (B) settings. The urban and rural patient pathways for Kenya use the same underlying methods as the national pathway (Figure 2). The urban or rural designation for care seekers was taken from the 2013 Kenya Household Health Expenditure and Utilization Survey. The urban or rural designation for health facilities was taken from 2013 Kenya Service Availability and Readiness Assessment Mapping (SARAM) records. Data for 25% of facilities from the Kenya Master Health Facility List (2407 of 9761) were either not included in the SARAM records or not given an urban or rural designation in the SARAM records. Thus, the sum of facilities from the urban and rural pathways is a subset of the facilities shown in the national pathway. For example, there are 12 public level 5 facilities in the national pathway, but only 11 of these are reflected in the urban and rural pathways combined. Abbreviation: NA, not available.
Figure 5.Comparison of rates of case notification to rates of access to diagnosis at initial care seeking. Data on access to diagnosis at the initial point of care seeking for each of the 47 counties are from column 3 of the patient pathway shown in Figure 1. The metric is compared to the 2015 case notification rates for each county. Mean rates of notifications and diagnosis access were 184 notifications/100 population and 44% of patients, respectively.
Figure 4.Comparison of smear microscopy and GeneXpert diagnostic coverage in level 2 (L2) public sector facilities. L2 public sector facilities (mostly dispensaries) are the most common location where patients initiate their care-seeking journey. Nationally, only 19% of these facilities have microscopy available, and 17% are connected to other facilities for referral to undergo Xpert testing. This visual compares the diverse levels of microscopy coverage and Xpert system or referral coverage among these facilities at the county level. aFor each county, data reflect the variable (systems or referrals) with the greatest level of coverage.