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Examining pulmonary TB patient management and healthcare workers exposures in two public tertiary care hospitals, Bangladesh

Implementation of tuberculosis (TB) infection prevention and control (IPC) guidelines in public tertiary care general hospitals remain challenging due to limited evidence of pulmonary TB (PTB) patients’ duration of hospital stay and management. To fill this evidence gap, this study examined adult PT...

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Autores principales: Islam, Md. Saiful, Banu, Sayera, Tarannum, Sayeeda, Chowdhury, Kamal Ibne Amin, Nazneen, Arifa, Islam, Mohammad Tauhidul, Shafique, S. M. Zafor, Islam, S. M. Hasibul, Chughtai, Abrar Ahmad, Seale, Holly
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10021262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36962098
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000064
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author Islam, Md. Saiful
Banu, Sayera
Tarannum, Sayeeda
Chowdhury, Kamal Ibne Amin
Nazneen, Arifa
Islam, Mohammad Tauhidul
Shafique, S. M. Zafor
Islam, S. M. Hasibul
Chughtai, Abrar Ahmad
Seale, Holly
author_facet Islam, Md. Saiful
Banu, Sayera
Tarannum, Sayeeda
Chowdhury, Kamal Ibne Amin
Nazneen, Arifa
Islam, Mohammad Tauhidul
Shafique, S. M. Zafor
Islam, S. M. Hasibul
Chughtai, Abrar Ahmad
Seale, Holly
author_sort Islam, Md. Saiful
collection PubMed
description Implementation of tuberculosis (TB) infection prevention and control (IPC) guidelines in public tertiary care general hospitals remain challenging due to limited evidence of pulmonary TB (PTB) patients’ duration of hospital stay and management. To fill this evidence gap, this study examined adult PTB patient management, healthcare workers’ (HCWs) exposures and IPC practices in two public tertiary care hospitals in Bangladesh.Between December 2017 and September 2019, a multidisciplinary team conducted structured observations, a hospital record review, and in-depth interviews with hospital staff from four adult medicine wards.Over 20 months, we identified 1,200 presumptive TB patients through the hospital record review, of whom 263 were confirmed PTB patients who stayed in the hospital, a median of 4.7 days without TB treatment and possibly contaminated the inpatients wards. Over 141 observation hours, we found a median of 3.35 occupants present per 10 m(2) of floor space and recorded a total of 17,085 coughs and 316 sneezes: a median of 3.9 coughs or sneezes per 10 m(2) per hour per ward. Only 8.4% of coughs and 21% of sneezes were covered by cloths, paper, tissues, or by hand. The HCWs reportedly could not isolate the TB patients due to limited resources and space and could not provide them with a mask. Further, patients and HCWs did not wear any respirators.The study identified that most TB patients stayed in the hospitals untreated for some duration of time. These PTB patients frequently coughed and sneezed without any facial protection that potentially contaminated the ward environment and put everyone, including the HCWs, at risk of TB infection. Interventions that target TB patients screening on admission, isolation of presumptive TB patients, respiratory hygiene, and HCWs’ use of personal protective equipment need to be enhanced and evaluated for acceptability, practicality and scale-up.
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spelling pubmed-100212622023-03-17 Examining pulmonary TB patient management and healthcare workers exposures in two public tertiary care hospitals, Bangladesh Islam, Md. Saiful Banu, Sayera Tarannum, Sayeeda Chowdhury, Kamal Ibne Amin Nazneen, Arifa Islam, Mohammad Tauhidul Shafique, S. M. Zafor Islam, S. M. Hasibul Chughtai, Abrar Ahmad Seale, Holly PLOS Glob Public Health Research Article Implementation of tuberculosis (TB) infection prevention and control (IPC) guidelines in public tertiary care general hospitals remain challenging due to limited evidence of pulmonary TB (PTB) patients’ duration of hospital stay and management. To fill this evidence gap, this study examined adult PTB patient management, healthcare workers’ (HCWs) exposures and IPC practices in two public tertiary care hospitals in Bangladesh.Between December 2017 and September 2019, a multidisciplinary team conducted structured observations, a hospital record review, and in-depth interviews with hospital staff from four adult medicine wards.Over 20 months, we identified 1,200 presumptive TB patients through the hospital record review, of whom 263 were confirmed PTB patients who stayed in the hospital, a median of 4.7 days without TB treatment and possibly contaminated the inpatients wards. Over 141 observation hours, we found a median of 3.35 occupants present per 10 m(2) of floor space and recorded a total of 17,085 coughs and 316 sneezes: a median of 3.9 coughs or sneezes per 10 m(2) per hour per ward. Only 8.4% of coughs and 21% of sneezes were covered by cloths, paper, tissues, or by hand. The HCWs reportedly could not isolate the TB patients due to limited resources and space and could not provide them with a mask. Further, patients and HCWs did not wear any respirators.The study identified that most TB patients stayed in the hospitals untreated for some duration of time. These PTB patients frequently coughed and sneezed without any facial protection that potentially contaminated the ward environment and put everyone, including the HCWs, at risk of TB infection. Interventions that target TB patients screening on admission, isolation of presumptive TB patients, respiratory hygiene, and HCWs’ use of personal protective equipment need to be enhanced and evaluated for acceptability, practicality and scale-up. Public Library of Science 2022-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC10021262/ /pubmed/36962098 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000064 Text en © 2022 Islam et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Islam, Md. Saiful
Banu, Sayera
Tarannum, Sayeeda
Chowdhury, Kamal Ibne Amin
Nazneen, Arifa
Islam, Mohammad Tauhidul
Shafique, S. M. Zafor
Islam, S. M. Hasibul
Chughtai, Abrar Ahmad
Seale, Holly
Examining pulmonary TB patient management and healthcare workers exposures in two public tertiary care hospitals, Bangladesh
title Examining pulmonary TB patient management and healthcare workers exposures in two public tertiary care hospitals, Bangladesh
title_full Examining pulmonary TB patient management and healthcare workers exposures in two public tertiary care hospitals, Bangladesh
title_fullStr Examining pulmonary TB patient management and healthcare workers exposures in two public tertiary care hospitals, Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Examining pulmonary TB patient management and healthcare workers exposures in two public tertiary care hospitals, Bangladesh
title_short Examining pulmonary TB patient management and healthcare workers exposures in two public tertiary care hospitals, Bangladesh
title_sort examining pulmonary tb patient management and healthcare workers exposures in two public tertiary care hospitals, bangladesh
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10021262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36962098
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0000064
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