Cargando…

Tuberculosis patients in an Indian mega-city: Where do they live and where are they diagnosed?

OBJECTIVE: Tuberculosis (TB) is a major source of mortality in urban India, with many structural challenges to optimal care delivery. In the government TB program in Chennai, India’s fourth most populous city, there is a 49% gap between the official number of smear-positive TB patients diagnosed and...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Subbaraman, Ramnath, Thomas, Beena E., Sellappan, Senthil, Suresh, Chandra, Jayabal, Lavanya, Lincy, Savari, Raja, Agnes L., McFall, Allison, Solomon, Sunil Suhas, Mayer, Kenneth H., Swaminathan, Soumya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5557603/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28813536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183240
_version_ 1783257241280839680
author Subbaraman, Ramnath
Thomas, Beena E.
Sellappan, Senthil
Suresh, Chandra
Jayabal, Lavanya
Lincy, Savari
Raja, Agnes L.
McFall, Allison
Solomon, Sunil Suhas
Mayer, Kenneth H.
Swaminathan, Soumya
author_facet Subbaraman, Ramnath
Thomas, Beena E.
Sellappan, Senthil
Suresh, Chandra
Jayabal, Lavanya
Lincy, Savari
Raja, Agnes L.
McFall, Allison
Solomon, Sunil Suhas
Mayer, Kenneth H.
Swaminathan, Soumya
author_sort Subbaraman, Ramnath
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Tuberculosis (TB) is a major source of mortality in urban India, with many structural challenges to optimal care delivery. In the government TB program in Chennai, India’s fourth most populous city, there is a 49% gap between the official number of smear-positive TB patients diagnosed and the official number registered in TB treatment within the city in 2014. We hypothesize that this “urban registration gap” is partly due to rural patients temporarily visiting the city for diagnostic evaluation. METHODS: We collected data for one month (May 2015) from 22 government designated microscopy centers (DMCs) in Chennai where 90% of smear-positive TB patients are diagnosed and coded patient addresses by location. We also analyzed the distribution of chest symptomatics (i.e., patients screened for TB because of pulmonary symptoms) and diagnosed smear-positive TB patients for all of Chennai’s 54 DMCs in 2014. RESULTS: At 22 DMCs in May 2015, 565 of 3,543 (15.9%) chest symptomatics and 71 of 412 (17.2%) diagnosed smear-positive patients had an address outside of Chennai. At the city’s four high patient volume DMCs, 54 of 270 (20.0%) smear-positive patients lived out-of-city. At one of these high-volume DMCs, 31 of 59 (52.5%) smear-positive patients lived out-of-city. Out of 6,135 smear-positive patients diagnosed in Chennai in 2014, 3,498 (57%) were diagnosed at the four high-volume DMCs. The 32 DMCs with the lowest patient volume diagnosed 10% of all smear-positive patients. CONCLUSIONS: TB case detection in Chennai is centralized, with four high-volume DMCs making most diagnoses. One-sixth of patients are from outside the city, most of whom get evaluated at these high-volume DMCs. This calls for better coordination between high-volume city DMCs and rural TB units where many patients may take TB treatment. Patient mobility only partly explains Chennai’s urban registration gap, suggesting that pretreatment loss to follow-up of patients who live within the city may also be a major problem.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5557603
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-55576032017-08-25 Tuberculosis patients in an Indian mega-city: Where do they live and where are they diagnosed? Subbaraman, Ramnath Thomas, Beena E. Sellappan, Senthil Suresh, Chandra Jayabal, Lavanya Lincy, Savari Raja, Agnes L. McFall, Allison Solomon, Sunil Suhas Mayer, Kenneth H. Swaminathan, Soumya PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: Tuberculosis (TB) is a major source of mortality in urban India, with many structural challenges to optimal care delivery. In the government TB program in Chennai, India’s fourth most populous city, there is a 49% gap between the official number of smear-positive TB patients diagnosed and the official number registered in TB treatment within the city in 2014. We hypothesize that this “urban registration gap” is partly due to rural patients temporarily visiting the city for diagnostic evaluation. METHODS: We collected data for one month (May 2015) from 22 government designated microscopy centers (DMCs) in Chennai where 90% of smear-positive TB patients are diagnosed and coded patient addresses by location. We also analyzed the distribution of chest symptomatics (i.e., patients screened for TB because of pulmonary symptoms) and diagnosed smear-positive TB patients for all of Chennai’s 54 DMCs in 2014. RESULTS: At 22 DMCs in May 2015, 565 of 3,543 (15.9%) chest symptomatics and 71 of 412 (17.2%) diagnosed smear-positive patients had an address outside of Chennai. At the city’s four high patient volume DMCs, 54 of 270 (20.0%) smear-positive patients lived out-of-city. At one of these high-volume DMCs, 31 of 59 (52.5%) smear-positive patients lived out-of-city. Out of 6,135 smear-positive patients diagnosed in Chennai in 2014, 3,498 (57%) were diagnosed at the four high-volume DMCs. The 32 DMCs with the lowest patient volume diagnosed 10% of all smear-positive patients. CONCLUSIONS: TB case detection in Chennai is centralized, with four high-volume DMCs making most diagnoses. One-sixth of patients are from outside the city, most of whom get evaluated at these high-volume DMCs. This calls for better coordination between high-volume city DMCs and rural TB units where many patients may take TB treatment. Patient mobility only partly explains Chennai’s urban registration gap, suggesting that pretreatment loss to follow-up of patients who live within the city may also be a major problem. Public Library of Science 2017-08-15 /pmc/articles/PMC5557603/ /pubmed/28813536 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183240 Text en © 2017 Subbaraman et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://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
Subbaraman, Ramnath
Thomas, Beena E.
Sellappan, Senthil
Suresh, Chandra
Jayabal, Lavanya
Lincy, Savari
Raja, Agnes L.
McFall, Allison
Solomon, Sunil Suhas
Mayer, Kenneth H.
Swaminathan, Soumya
Tuberculosis patients in an Indian mega-city: Where do they live and where are they diagnosed?
title Tuberculosis patients in an Indian mega-city: Where do they live and where are they diagnosed?
title_full Tuberculosis patients in an Indian mega-city: Where do they live and where are they diagnosed?
title_fullStr Tuberculosis patients in an Indian mega-city: Where do they live and where are they diagnosed?
title_full_unstemmed Tuberculosis patients in an Indian mega-city: Where do they live and where are they diagnosed?
title_short Tuberculosis patients in an Indian mega-city: Where do they live and where are they diagnosed?
title_sort tuberculosis patients in an indian mega-city: where do they live and where are they diagnosed?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5557603/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28813536
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183240
work_keys_str_mv AT subbaramanramnath tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT thomasbeenae tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT sellappansenthil tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT sureshchandra tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT jayaballavanya tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT lincysavari tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT rajaagnesl tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT mcfallallison tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT solomonsunilsuhas tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT mayerkennethh tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed
AT swaminathansoumya tuberculosispatientsinanindianmegacitywheredotheyliveandwherearetheydiagnosed