"My Favourite Day Is Sunday": Community Perceptions of (Drug-Resistant) Tuberculosis and Ambulatory Tuberculosis Care in Kara Suu District, Osh Province, Kyrgyzstan
OBJECTIVES:
Kyrgyzstan
is one of the 27 high multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) burden
countries listed by the WHO. In 2012, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) started a
drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) project in Kara Suu District. A qualitative
study was undertaken to understand the perception of TB and DR-TB in order to
improve the effectiveness and acceptance of the MSF intervention and to support
advocacy strategies for an ambulatory model of care.
METHODS:
This
paper reports findings from 63 interviews with patients, caregivers, health
care providers and members of communities. Data was analysed using a
qualitative content analysis. Validation was ensured by triangulation and a
'thick' description of the research context, and by presenting deviant cases.
RESULTS:
Findings
show that the general population interprets TB as the 'lungs having a cold' or
as a 'family disease' rather than as an infectious illness. From their
perspective, individuals facing poor living conditions are more likely to get
TB than wealthier people. Vulnerable groups such as drug and alcohol users,
homeless persons, ethnic minorities and young women face barriers in accessing
health care. As also reported in other publications, TB is highly stigmatised
and possible side effects of the long treatment course are seen as unbearable;
therefore, people only turn to public health care quite late. Most patients
prefer ambulatory treatment because of the much needed emotional support from
their social environment, which positively impacts treatment concordance.
Health care providers favour inpatient treatment only for a better monitoring
of side effects. Health staff increasingly acknowledges the central role they
play in supporting DR-TB patients, and the importance of assuming a more
empathic attitude.
CONCLUSIONS:
Health
promotion activities should aim at improving knowledge on TB and DR-TB,
reducing stigma, and fostering the inclusion of vulnerable populations. Health
seeking delays and adherence problems will be countered by further
implementation of shortened treatment regimens. An ambulatory model of care is
proposed when convenient for the patient; hospitalisation is favoured only when
seen as more appropriate for the respective individual.
- 1Médecins Sans Frontières, Vienna Evaluation Unit, Vienna, Austria.
- 2Médecins Sans Frontières, Brussels, Belgium.
- 3Ministry of Health, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
- 4Médecins Sans Frontières, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
- 5Médecins Sans Frontières, Osh, Kyrgyzstan.
- PLoS One. 2016 Mar 28;11(3):e0152283. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0152283. eCollection 2016.
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