| Literature DB >> 32532101 |
Bhola Rai1, Kritika Dixit1,2, Tara Prasad Aryal1, Gokul Mishra1,3, Noemia Teixeira de Siqueira-Filha3, Puskar Raj Paudel4, Jens W Levy4, Job van Rest4, Suman Chandra Gurung1,3, Raghu Dhital1, Knut Lönnroth2, S Bertel Squire3,5, Maxine Caws1,3, Tom Wingfield2,3,5.
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB), the leading single infectious diseases killer globally, is driven by poverty. Conversely, having TB worsens impoverishment. During TB illness, lost income and out-of-pocket costs can become "catastrophic", leading patients to abandon treatment, develop drug-resistance, and die. WHO's 2015 End TB Strategy recommends eliminating catastrophic costs and providing socioeconomic support for TB-affected people. However, there is negligible evidence to guide the design and implementation of such socioeconomic support, especially in low-income, TB-endemic countries. A national, multi-sectoral workshop was held in Kathmandu, Nepal, on the 11th and 12th September 2019, to develop a shortlist of feasible, locally appropriate socioeconomic support interventions for TB-affected households in Nepal, a low-income country with significant TB burden. The workshop brought together key stakeholders in Nepal including from the Ministry of Health and Population, Department of Health Services, Provincial Health Directorate, Health Offices, National TB Program (NTP); and TB/Leprosy Officers, healthcare workers, community health volunteers, TB-affected people, and external development partners (EDP). During the workshop, participants reviewed current Nepal NTP data and strategy, discussed the preliminary results of a mixed-methods study of the socioeconomic determinants and consequences of TB in Nepal, described existing and potential socioeconomic interventions for TB-affected households in Nepal, and selected the most promising interventions for future randomized controlled trial evaluations in Nepal. This report describes the activities, outcomes, and recommendations from the workshop.Entities:
Keywords: Nepal; catastrophic costs; poverty; social protection; socioeconomic support; tuberculosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32532101 PMCID: PMC7345977 DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed5020098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Infect Dis ISSN: 2414-6366
Figure 1Perceived barriers to accessing and engaging with tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis and care.
Figure 2Perceived facilitators to accessing and engaging with TB diagnosis and care.
Current and potential psychosocial and economic interventions.
| Intervention Element | Existing Interventions | Refinements of Existing Interventions | Suitable Potential Interventions | Mode of Delivery |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Routine NTP-led counseling for TB-affected people, which focuses solely on TB treatment adherence | Existing counselling about adherence to TB medications could be supplemented by complementary psychosocial counselling | Educational and social awareness campaigns | Psychosocial counseling to patients/households by trained health workers in healthcare facilities or in people’s homes |
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| Rs 3000/month as nutritional/transport allowance for ambulatory DR cases | Income generation activities or back-to-work schemes | Conditional cash transfer through bank accounts or mobile phones |
Definitions of vulnerable groups and benefits and drawbacks of targeted support.
| Vulnerable Groups | Targeting Support | Benefits | Drawbacks |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Economic status (defined by eligibility for existing social health insurance programs) Limited geographical access to healthcare Co-morbidities (e.g., HIV, diabetes) Other specific groups including: children, elderly population, pregnant women, separated men and women, ethnic minorities, people with disabilities, homeless, daily waged workers or unemployed | Two main options for provision of socioeconomic support were discussed: a blanket “one size fits all” approach given that the majority of TB-affected households are economically and socially deprived support stratified by estimated socioeconomic vulnerability defined by meeting eligibility criteria for existing social health insurance and/or meeting other definition of belonging to a vulnerable group |
Needs-based socioeconomic support Address both socioeconomic determinants and consequences of tuberculosis Enhance early diagnosis and prompt treatment and potentially interrupt transmission Improve TB case notification, treatment adherence and outcome A rights-based approach would ensure fundamental human rights for health were met Reduces stigma and discrimination as well as awareness Mitigation of catastrophic costs by defraying both direct and indirect TB-related costs (e.g., lost income) |
Chances of bias and mis-categorization of TB-affected households as vulnerable or not with stratified support Concerns were raised concerning the potential for creation of dependency on support beyond TB illness among the person with TB and their household Huge economic burden to the country and health system of implementing and scaling up socioeconomic support Financial feasibility and sustainability would depend on start-up and maintenance costs of support scheme and funding stream (e.g. burden on National TB Program or costs shared across governmental departments including, for example, those related to health, social inclusion, and job security) Concerns were raised concerning accountability and transparency of the program |
Design of and votes for psychosocial and economic elements of potential integrated socioeconomic support package for people with TB.
| Psychosocial Package | Votes | Economic Package | Votes |
|---|---|---|---|
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Monthly basic cash transfer for all patients (DR-TB NRs 6000; DS-TB NRs 1000)* Pocket money for people with DR-TB in hostel NRs 1500 Conditional cash transfer for medication side effects to health centre (DR-TB 5000 NRs; DS-TB 1000 NRs.) |
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Monthly basic cash transfer for all patients (DR-TB NRs 6000; DS-TB NRs 1000)* Pocket money for people with DR-TB in hostel NRs 1500 Additional cash transfer for socially high-risk persons (to be defined) with TB (3000 NRs.) |
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Legend: The anonymized vote took place at the end of the workshop. Thirty-eight participants were present to cast votes. The option of not casting a vote was given and four votes were not cast for the economic element of the intervention. The sections of the cells that are underlined show the differences between psychosocial packages A and B, and economic packages A and B. The sections of text not underlined in these cells show the elements which are the same in both psychosocial packages A and B, and economic packages A and B.