| Literature DB >> 33355269 |
Tripti Pande1, Nathaly Aguilera Vasquez2, Danielle Cazabon3, Jacob Creswell4, Miranda Brouwer5, Oriol Ramis6, Robert Hartley Stevens7, Ramya Ananthakrishnan8, Shahina Qayyum9, Chukwuka Alphonsus10, Charity Oga-Omenka2, Vaidehi Nafade3, Paulami Sen3, Madhukar Pai3,11.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: public health; qualitative study; screening; tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33355269 PMCID: PMC7757499 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-003835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Characteristics of ACF implementors
| Country | Year | Organisation category | Intervention type* | Intervention |
| Afghanistan | 2017–2018 | Non-governmental organisation | Community outreach | School girls were trained to screen women and girls in rural villages. Also, health workers (doctors, midwives, nurses) screened women and young girls attending clinics. |
| Ethiopia | 2013–2015 | Academic institution | Community outreach | Health extension workers conducted house-to-house screening among adults and contact tracing was also conducted. Isoniazid Preventative Therapy (IPT) was initiated for asymptomatic children. |
| India | 2017–2019 | Non-governmental organisation | Systematic screening, community outreach, contact tracing | Healthcare workers screened individuals for TB in outpatient departments, and pharmacies and conducted contact tracing at home among contacts of people with TB. |
| Kenya | 2010–2012 | Non-governmental organisation | Contact tracing, key populations | Recruited and trained community health workers to conduct door-to-door TB and HIV screening, and contact tracing among contacts of people with TB. |
| Nepal | 2014–2016 | Non-governmental organisation | Systematic screening, community outreach | Conducted chest camps for community based screening of children and people living in slums. |
| Nigeria | 2013–2014 | Non-governmental organisation | Key populations | Using health workers to screen children for TB at primary schools and contacts of people with TB, at anti-retroviral treatment clinics. |
| Pakistan | 2018–2019 | Academic institution | Key populations | Outreach workers recruited and trained by the project conducted house-to-house screening or work place screening among transgender populations. |
| Pakistan | 2014–2016 | Non-governmental organisation | Community outreach, contact tracing, key populations | Engaged community screeners to screen households and contacts of people with TB. They were also responsible for sputum collection, case detection and follow-up with people with TB. |
| Peru | 2017–2018 | Non-governmental organisation | Community outreach | Individuals who formerly had TB screened individuals for TB within their communities. |
| South Africa | 2013–2014 | Non-governmental organisation | Community outreach, key population | Engaged community health workers and health workers to conduct household screening for TB and contact tracing. |
*Community outreach=conducting house to house screening within the community or mass screening events; contact tracing=screening contacts of people who had TB; systematic screening=screening a particular targeted population; key populations=those identified as vulnerable or targeted populations within the respective country/region.
ACF, active case finding interventions; TB, tuberculosis.
Figure 1Three lessons learnt from 10 active case finding interventions and emerging recommendations.