| Literature DB >> 34152962 |
Rebecca Nzawa Soko, Rachael M Burke, Helena R A Feasey, Wakumanya Sibande, Marriott Nliwasa, Marc Y R Henrion, McEwen Khundi, Peter J Dodd, Chu Chang Ku, Gift Kawalazira, Augustine T Choko, Titus H Divala, Elizabeth L Corbett, Peter MacPherson.
Abstract
The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic might affect tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis and patient care. We analyzed a citywide electronic TB register in Blantyre, Malawi and interviewed TB officers. Malawi did not have an official COVID-19 lockdown but closed schools and borders on March 23, 2020. In an interrupted time series analysis, we noted an immediate 35.9% reduction in TB notifications in April 2020; notifications recovered to near prepandemic numbers by December 2020. However, 333 fewer cumulative TB notifications were received than anticipated. Women and girls were affected more (30.7% fewer cases) than men and boys (20.9% fewer cases). Fear of COVID-19 infection, temporary facility closures, inadequate personal protective equipment, and COVID-19 stigma because of similar symptoms to TB were mentioned as reasons for fewer people being diagnosed with TB. Public health measures could benefit control of both TB and COVID-19, but only if TB diagnostic services remain accessible and are considered safe to attend.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS; SARS-CoV-2; bacteria; coronavirus; coronavirus disease; disease surveillance; health systems; respiratory infections; severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; tuberculosis; viruses; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34152962 PMCID: PMC8237899 DOI: 10.3201/eid2707.210557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Effects of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic on monthly TB case notification rates in Blantyre, Malawi. Circles represent the observed number of cases each month. Solid blue line represents the fitted model with both step and slope change due to COVID-19; teal shaded area represents 95% CI. Pink dotted line represents counterfactual expected TB rates; pink shaded area represents 95% CI. Gray shaded area on the right indicates timeframe in which the COVID-19 emergency was declared in Malawi. TB, tuberculosis.
Modeled effects of coronavirus disease pandemic on tuberculosis case notifications, April–December 2020, Blantyre, Malawi*
| Models | Observed no. notified TB cases with COVID-19 | Median counterfactual model-estimated no. notified TB cases without COVID-19 (95% CI) | ||
| % Difference (95% CI) | ||||
| Absolute | Relative | |||
| Model 1 | ||||
| Overall | 1,075 | 1,408 (1,366–1,451) | 333 (291–376) | 23.7 (21.4–26.0) |
| Model 2 | ||||
| Sex | ||||
| M | 692 | 875 (848–901) | 183 (156–209) | 20.9 (18.5–23.3) |
| F | 383 | 553 (534–571) | 170 (151–188) | 30.7 (28.4–33.0) |
| Primary health centers | 488 | 761 (737–785) | 273 (249–297) | 35.9 (33.9–37.9) |
| Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital | 587 | 666 (645–688) | 79 (58–101) | 11.9 (9.10–14.7) |
| HIV status | ||||
| HIV-positive | 660 | 820 (796–845) | 160 (136–185) | 19.6 (17.2–21.9) |
| HIV-negative | 415 | 607 (586–627) | 192 (171–212) | 31.6 (29.3–33.8) |
*COVID-19, coronavirus disease; TB, tuberculosis.
Figure 2Effects of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) on monthly TB case notifications in Blantyre, Malawi, by HIV status, registration site, and sex. A) TB notifications at primary healthcare centers. B) TB notifications at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital. Dots indicate observed number of cases per month. Solid lines indicate fitted model with both step and slope change due to COVID-19; shaded areas indicate 95% CI. Vertical dotted lines indicate time that COVID-19 emergency was declared in Malawi. TB, tuberculosis.
Quotations from in-depth interviews with health officers about reasons for reduced tuberculosis notifications due to coronavirus disease epidemic in Malawi, June–December 2020*
| Theme, quote no. | Participant no., sex | Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Fear of COVID-19 contagion at health facilities | ||
| Q1 | 02, F | “People were afraid of getting infected if they come to the facility.” |
| Q2 | 09, F | “… they were afraid saying that if the workers are found with COVID, so if we go there they will infect us.” |
| COVID-19 related health facility closures | ||
| Q3 | 03, F | “…they were told that the clinic had been shut down and people are not being assisted… which means people were just staying in their homes and the TB was just being spread amongst them.” |
| Q4 | 02, F | “Our facility wasn’t closed, but there was a certain week that we were just going but we were not working because there was no PPE, so people were afraid. There were no gloves, no masks how were we going to work? So a sit-in happened.” |
| Q5 | 05, F | “Yes we had a strike at this hospital and the strike occurred in all health centres. The reason behind the strike was that COVID-19 was at its peak but we didn’t have PPE which was putting us at risk.” |
| Q6 | 07, M | “The first strike was against shortage of PPEs and the second strike was organized by Interns who were complaining that they are making them work on this dangerous disease of COVID-19 yet they are not being employed… And the other strike was about risk allowance.” |
| Effects of COVID-19 prevention measures on healthcare access | ||
| Q7 | 04, F | “…then government announced that wearing of mask is mandatory some people who couldn’t manage wear the mask were making a decision of not going to the hospital instead, some were complaining that they suffocate in a mask.” |
| Q8 | 08, F | “…all patients should be wearing masks when coming here but some patients were ignoring and when we send them back to go and get a mask some patients were ending up not coming back.” |
| Q9 | 08, F | “Some people travel from far communities to come here and the increase in transport fare also influenced some people to fail to come to the hospital.” |
| Similarity of TB and COVID-19 symptoms leading to reduced access to TB care | ||
| Q10 | 02, F | “… sometimes they think that if they test positive [for COVID-19], people will discriminate them, they have fear of unknown. So during this period people weren’t coming to say I have a cough, test me, they were just staying at home buying Bactrim and drinking it at home.” |
| Q11 | 06, F | “the signs and symptoms of COVID-19 and TB were somehow similar so because the signs were similar people were scared to come to the hospital because they were assuming that instead of testing them for TB we will test them for COVID-19” |
| Q12 | 07, M | “They were communicating that if a person has fever then that is a sign of COVID-19 and that particular person is required to go into isolation so people were afraid to come to the hospital when they have fever because of the messages that they may be isolated with their families.” |
| Q13 | 01, M | “… they were expecting that someone who has COVID-19 coughs and sneezes severely, and has fever and headaches, so when they ask about those, the same things that a TB patient presents, that was when those people were being sent back to go home and call the COVID-19 help line.” |
| Reduced healthcare worker capacity to support TB testing | ||
| Q14 | 05, F | “… we were no longer asking many questions once the person tells us that she has dry cough we were running away from that person… Because if the person has dry cough the first thing that we were thinking of is COVID-19.” |
| Q15 | 11, F | “I was scared because it was difficult to know if the patient is coughing because of TB or COVID-19.” |
| Q16 | 01, M | “… in the laboratory… the ones that are involved in the testing, they were refusing to handle sputum because they were taught that sputum has the highest concentration of COVID-19 so some were dodging which was resulting in delays.” |
*COVID-19, coronavirus disease; PPE, personal protective equipment; TB, tuberculosis.