Literature DB >> 29575386

Involving private practitioners in the Indian tuberculosis programme: a randomised trial.

Vijayashree Yellappa1,2, Tullia Battaglioli1, Sanath Kumar Gurum3, Devadasan Narayanan2, Patrick Van der Stuyft1,4.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To assess a multicomponent intervention to improve private practitioners (PPs) involvement in referral of presumptive pulmonary TB (PTB) cases to the Revised National TB Control Programme (RNTCP) for sputum examination.
METHODS: Randomised controlled trial. We randomly allocated all 189 eligible PPs in Tumkur city, South India, to intervention or control arm. The intervention, implemented between December 2014 and January 2016, included two sets of activities, one targeted at health system strengthening (building RNTCP staff capacity to collaborate with PPs, provision of feedback on referrals through SMS) and one targeted at intervention PPs (training in RNTCP, provision of referral pads and education materials and monthly visits to PPs by RNTCP staff). Crude and adjusted referral and PTB case-finding rate ratios were calculated with negative binomial regression.
RESULTS: PPs referred 836 individuals (548 from intervention and 169 from control arm PPs) of whom 176 were diagnosed with bacteriologically confirmed PTB. The proportion (95% confidence interval) of referring PPs [0.59 (0.49, 0.68) vs. 0.42 (0.32, 0.52) in the intervention and control arm, respectively], mean referral rate per PP-year [(5.7 (3.8, 8.7) vs. 1.8 (1.2, 2.8)] and smear-positive PTB case-finding rate per PP-year [(1.5 (0.9, 2.2) vs. 0.6 (0.3, 0.9)] were significantly higher in the intervention than the control arm. Stratifying by qualification, a statistically significant difference in the above indicators remained only among GPs and internists. Overall, surgeons, paediatricians and gynaecologists referred few patients. PP referrals contributed to 20% of the sputum smear positive PTB cases detected by RNTCP in Tumkur city (14% were from intervention arm PPs).
CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrated the effectiveness of a health system-oriented intervention to improve PP's referrals of presumptive PTB cases to RNTCP.
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  PPM; RNTCP; South India; aiguillage; essai contrôlé randomisé; praticien privé; private practitioner; randomised controlled trial; referral; sud de l'Inde; tuberculose; tuberculosis

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29575386     DOI: 10.1111/tmi.13053

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trop Med Int Health        ISSN: 1360-2276            Impact factor:   2.622


  2 in total

1.  A public health intervention package for increasing tuberculosis notifications from private practitioners in Bandung, Indonesia (INSTEP2): A cluster-randomised controlled trial protocol.

Authors:  Panji Fortuna Hadisoemarto; Bony Wiem Lestari; Katrina Sharples; Nur Afifah; Lidya Chaidir; Chuan-Chin Huang; Susan McAllister; Reinout van Crevel; Megan Murray; Bachti Alisjahbana; Philip C Hill
Journal:  F1000Res       Date:  2021-04-27

2.  Assessing the Status of Mandatory Tuberculosis Case Notification among Private Practitioners in Urban Puducherry.

Authors:  Kushagr Duggal; Margarette Elsy; Marie Gilbert Majella; Sujiv Akkilagunta; Swaroop Kumar Sahu
Journal:  Indian J Community Med       Date:  2021-12-08
  2 in total

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