| Literature DB >> 34876864 |
Winters Muttamba1, Mudarshiru Bbuye1, Joseph Baruch Baluku1,2, Stephen Kyaligonza1, Joanitah Nalunjogi1, Ivan Kimuli1, Bruce Kirenga1,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Prompt diagnosis of TB among adolescents may reduce transmission and improve individual outcomes. However, TB diagnosis in adolescents is challenging. This study sought to understand challenges to adolescent TB diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: adolescent TB; adolescent friendly TB services; adolescent health; school schedules
Year: 2021 PMID: 34876864 PMCID: PMC8643211 DOI: 10.2147/RMHP.S340112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Risk Manag Healthc Policy ISSN: 1179-1594
Emerging Themes and Quotes from the Focus Group Discussions
| Themes | Quotes |
|---|---|
| Knowledge and risk of TB | “Some of our friends engage in drinking alcohol and smoking which can lead to contracting TB.” 19-year-old Male; Entebbe Hospital |
| Conflicting school schedules | “Musawo, as I said it may be a chance, you may come early …. like now I came at around 9 am, but by now (1:30 pm), the pharmacy is still closed thus you cannot get medication so I have been here waiting, by now I cannot go to school so I have missed school today.” 18-year-old Male; Luwero Health Centre IV |
| The limited capacity of the school health system to diagnose TB | “ …. another thing, some of us find ourselves at school. When that cough gets you…..you know at school we have the health workers cough can get you and gets you for a long period or even when it has just got you and you go to say the school nurse, they do not care knowing much, they just ask you what is paining you and you say cough then she gives you drugs and then you stay there and they do not even allow you to go home to get to a hospital.” 17-year-old Female; Gombe hospital |
| Health systems challenges | “ …. the problem is that when you reach hospital, every health worker has their attitude, some are easy, and others are difficult. For some you describe your situation and how you feel, then they back at you that you have taken long without going to hospital and how you have been going to die. This demotivates for one to come back.” 18-year-old male from Nakaseke Health Centre IV |
| Fear of a TB diagnosis | “I was told I don’t have TB. But also on giving me the results, I was fearful……but they checked when I was fine, because I thought if they find me having TB, I may also have HIV” 16-year-old Female; Entebbe Hospital |
| Loss of trust in public health care systems | “ …. for me what took me to the clinic is that when you go to government hospitals, they tell you there is no medicine and tell you to go buy at private pharmacies, and usually the medicines are very expensive, and also the lines there are long and you find yourself coughing in people, they all look at you and you feel out of place. So a person who goes to the clinic may be better because, they get the services faster though they have to pay money.” 17-year-old Female; Entebbe Hospital |
| Role of parents | “For me they support me, even today they pushed me to come for checkup.” 16-year-old Male; Luwero hospital |
| TB exposure at schools | “Adolescents most cases are at school, they are always at school, imagine at school there is a biggest exposure, they are at risk, the dormitory is overcrowded, someone may be coughing without knowing whether he/she has TB. So all those children are at risk of getting TB, they are sleeping in the same dormitory, the dormitory is congested, may he/she does not know because they are lacking knowledge concerning TB.” Out Patient Department (OPD) TB nurse. |
| Uncooperative adolescents | “At times when they come to the hospitals, they do not say all. At times they hide this away from their parents. Even where they stay at times you find they have lived with someone who has ever had TB. Even as you take their history…ok at times as you take their history, you find they are reserved. Even when you request for a lab test, some of them are a bit hesitant to give a sample. At times they want to be followed up all the way.” OPD Nurse. |
| Health worker inadequacies regarding TB diagnosis in adolescents | “ I also think that we people who diagnose TB miss out on adolescents who have TB because we always think that one for someone to have TB, they must have low immunity or other accompanying factors, which is not easily thought of about adolescents. I can only think about TB when the adolescent has HIV otherwise, you be like nowhere this little girl may have TB so we normally treat other upper respiratory infection not thinking about TB.” A clinician said. |