| Literature DB >> 31203814 |
Daniel Chukwuemeka Ogbuabor1,2, Obinna Emmanuel Onwujekwe3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The role of governance in strengthening tuberculosis (TB) control has received little research attention. This review provides evidence of how institutional designs and organisational practices influence implementation of the national TB control programme (NTP) in Nigeria. MAIN TEXT: We conducted a scoping review using a five-stage framework to review published and grey literature in English, on implementation of Nigeria's NTP and identified themes related to governance using a health system governance framework. We included articles, of all study designs and methods, which described or analysed the processes of implementing TB control based on relevance to the research question. The review shows a dearth of studies which examined the role of governance in TB control in Nigeria. Although costed plans and policy coordination framework exist, public spending on TB control is low. While stakeholders' involvement in TB control is increasing, institutional capacity is limited, especially in the private sector. TB-specific legislation is absent. Deployment and transfer of staff to the NTP are not transparent. Health workers are not transparent in communicating service entitlements to users. Despite existence of supportive policies, integration of TB control into the community and general health services have been weak. Willingness to pay for TB services is high, however, transaction cost and stigma among patients limit equity. Effectiveness and efficiency of the NTP was hindered by inadequate human resources, dilapidated service delivery infrastructure and weak drug supply system. Despite adhering to standardized recording and reporting format, regular monitoring and evaluation, revision of reporting formats, and electronic data management system, TB surveillance system was found to be weak. Delay in TB diagnosis and initiation of care, poor staff attitude to patients, lack of privacy, poor management of drug reactions and absence of infection control measures breach ethical standards for TB care.Entities:
Keywords: Control programme; Governance; Nigeria; Scoping review; Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31203814 PMCID: PMC6572737 DOI: 10.1186/s40249-019-0556-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Infect Dis Poverty ISSN: 2049-9957 Impact factor: 4.520
Fig. 1A flowchart showing the process of article selection for this review
Applying Siddiqi et al. governance framework principles to tuberculosis (TB) control programme in Nigeria
| Dimensions | Domains |
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| Leaders should have strategic direction with clear priorities, roles and performance targets; and a shared long-term goal and strategic plan for health development | Enabling and constraining factors to development and implementation of plans and policies for TB control. |
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| People should have voice in decision-making for health, either directly or through their legitimate intermediate institutions that represent their interests. | Enabling and constraining factors to coordination and consultation with service providers, service users and other sectors outside of TB programme and health. |
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| Legal frameworks pertaining to health and standards, guidelines, policies, and regulations should be fair and enforced impartially. | Enabling and constraining factors to enforcement of public health laws and regulations governing TB control. |
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| Processes, institutions and information needed to understand, and monitor health matters are directly accessible to relevant health system actors when and where they are needed. | Enabling and constraining factors to ensuring transparency in resource allocation, decision-making, appointment and transfer of staff in TB control programme. |
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| Institutions and processes should try to serve all stakeholders to ensure that policies and programmes are responsive to health and non-health needs of its users | Enabling and constraining factors to integration of TB program into general health services as well as in the community, budget of TB and priority given to TB in resource allocation. |
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| All men and women should have opportunities to improve or maintain their health and well-being. | Enabling and constraining factors to TB control equitable financing, access to services and anti-stigma programmes. |
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| Processes and institutions should produce results that meet population needs and influence health systems outcomes without waste of resources. | Enabling and constraining factors to ensuring human resources capacity building, infrastructural development and supply chain management of TB drugs and laboratory consumables. |
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| Decision makers and service providers are answerable to the public and institutional stakeholders for processes and outcomes. | Enabling and constraining factors to enforcement of citizen-driven accountability in TB control programme. |
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| Timely generation, collection, analysis and dissemination of accurate information to provide evidence for informed decisions that influence behaviour of different actors and interest groups. | Enabling and constraining factors to implementation of electronic data management system, generation and use of data for wider system monitoring and decision-making in TB control. |
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| Policies and institutional mechanisms should promote and enforce high ethical standards in healthcare and safeguard interests and rights of patients. | Enabling and constraining factors to enforcement ethical standards of care to ensure people-centred TB care. |
Governance of national tuberculosis control programme (NTP) in Nigeria
| Governance dimension | Constraints | Enablers |
|---|---|---|
| Strategic vision | Insufficient or delayed government funding | Existence of strategic plans for Tuberculosis (TB) Robust policy coordination framework |
| Participation and consensus orientation | Weak public-private mix for TB service delivery | Strong stakeholder involvement in policy development and service delivery |
| Rule of law | Weak legal regimen for isolation of TB patients | Assessment of legal environment for TB control completed. |
| Absence of TB legislation and law regulating sale of anti-TB drugs | ||
| Transparency | Absence of clear staff needs. | |
| Frequent changes in leadership of NTP | ||
| Responsiveness | Stigma by health workers and the public | Need-based drug distribution system |
| Poor infrastructure | Policies support integration of TB into general health services and community. | |
Weak linkage between TB and Maternal and child health services Weak collaboration between NTP and National Primary Health Care Development Agency. Lack of incentives for community volunteers | Use of community volunteers | |
| Equity and inclusiveness | High transaction cost. | Free TB sputum microscopy and treatment policy |
| Women, children and rural dwellers have poor access to TB care. | ||
| Exclusion of TB from national health insurance guidelines. | ||
| Effectiveness and efficiency | Poor attraction of health workers to TB care | Existence of a national TB training school |
| NTP lack authority to influence staff recruitment and distribution. | Well-structured laboratory network system. Introduction of new diagnostics | |
| Poorly motivated TB service providers | ||
| Poor service delivery infrastructure | ||
| Inadequate drug distribution from state store to health facilities. | ||
| Accountability | Absence of formal social accountability initiatives | Strong civil society involvement |
| Intelligence and information | Incomplete and delayed quarterly reporting. | Adherence to World Health Organisation’s recording and reporting standard |
| Poor storage of surveillance data | Regular and effective data review meetings | |
| Weak human resources capacity in data management | Frequent revision of reporting formats Transition from paper to an electronic data management system | |
| Inadequate coverage for childhood TB | Existence of national prevalence data | |
| Ethics | Delays in TB diagnosis and initiation of care | Standards for TB care exist. |
Poor staff attitude Long waiting time Absence of TB infection control measures Prevalent informal payments | Existence of infection control guidelines |