| Literature DB >> 33259489 |
Aicha Boukthir1,2, Jihene Bettaieb1,2, Astrid C Erber3,4, Hind Bouguerra5, Rym Mallekh1, Ikbel Naouar1, Adel Gharbi1, Manal Alghamdi6, Emma Plugge7, Piero Olliaro4,8, Afif Ben Salah1,2,6.
Abstract
Although non-fatal and mostly self-healing in the case of Leishmania (L.) major, cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is mainly treated to reduce lesion healing time. Less attention is paid to the improvement of scars, especially in aesthetically relevant areas of the body, which can dramatically affect patients' wellbeing. We explored patients' perspectives about treatment options and the social and psychological burden of disease (lesion and scar). Individual in-depth interviews were conducted with ten confirmed CL patients at two L. major endemic sites in Southern Tunisia (Sidi Bouzid and Gafsa). Participants were selected using a sampling approach along a spectrum covering e.g. age, sex, and clinical presentation. Patients' experiences, opinions and preferences were explored, and their detailed accounts gave an insight on the impact of CL on their everyday lives. The impact of CL was found to be considerable. Most patients were not satisfied with treatment performance and case management. They expected a shorter healing time and better accessibility of the health system. Tolerance of the burden of disease was variable and ranged from acceptance of hidden scars to suicidal thoughts resulting from the fear to become handicapped, and the stress caused by close relatives. Some believed CL to be a form of skin cancer. Unexpectedly, this finding shows the big gap between the perspectives of patients and assumptions of health professionals regarding this disease. This study provided valuable information for better case management emphasizing the importance of improving communication with patients, and accessibility to treatment. It generated context-specific knowledge to policy makers in Tunisia to implement effective case management in a country where access to treatment remains a challenge due to socio-economic and geographic barriers despite a long tradition in CL control.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33259489 PMCID: PMC7707605 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0242494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Location of Gafsa and Sidi Bouzid governorates in Tunisia.
The coding framework used.
Beliefs Causes Transmission Fears Treatment Prevention | Efficacy Duration Side effects Treatment in general, traditional/medical/self-treatments Time of healing Geographical Financial Cultural Administration Pills/IV/D Duration of treatment | |
Cosmetic effects/scars Disease complications Disease relapse/reinfection Healing process Sleep Limitations in everyday life and disability Work |
Nodes are in bold.
Description of study participants.
| Patient | Gender | Age | Profession | Education level | Current treatment | Marital status | Residence area | Lesion | Scar | Lesion/scar location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 32 | Driver | License degree | Cryotherapy | Single | Rural | 1 | 1 | Ankle/shoulder | |
| Male | 65 | Farmer | Unschooled | Antimoniate of meglumine | Married | Rural | 5 | Ankle | ||
| Pills, Betadine | ||||||||||
| Woman | 27 | Jobless | Bachelor degree | Cryotherapy, Metronidazole and self-medication | Single | Urban | 1 (severe) | Leg/Shin | ||
| Woman | 32 | Farmer | Elementary education | Metronidazole, antibiotics & traditional remedies | Married | Rural | 1 (severe) | Leg/Shin | ||
| Male | 54 | Teacher | License degree | Metronidazole, antibiotics, Local treatment | Divorced | Urban | 1 | Hand | ||
| Male | 37 | Guard National Officer | Bachelor degree | Antimoniate of meglumine, Metronidazole, antibiotics Cryotherapy | Married | Urban | 5 | Leg/ Ankle | ||
| Woman | 28 | Jobless | License degree | Cryotherapy, local treatment | Single | Urban | 2 | 2 | Leg | |
| Woman | 38 | Agriculture worker | Elementary education | Cryotherapy | Single | Rural | 2 | Leg/hand | ||
| Woman | 42 | Jobless | Unschooled | Local treatment | Single | Rural | 4 | Face | ||
| Woman | 36 | Jobless | Elementary education | Not yet treated | Married | Rural | 1 (severe) | Arm |
Fig 2Main study themes and subthemes derived from the in-depth interview transcripts.