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Impact of involvement of non-formal health providers on TB case notification among migrant slum-dwelling populations in Odisha, India

BACKGROUND: Migrant labourers living in the slums of urban and industrial patches across India make up a key sub-population so far controlling Tuberculosis (TB) in the country is concerned. This is because many TB patients from these communities- remain under reached by the Revised National Tubercul...

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Autores principales: Dutta, Ambarish, Pattanaik, Sarthak, Choudhury, Rajendra, Nanda, Pritish, Sahu, Suvanand, Panigrahi, Rajendra, Padhi, Bijaya K., Sahoo, Krushna Chandra, Mishra, P. R., Panigrahi, Pinaki, Lekharu, Daisy, Stevens, Robert H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5965830/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29791449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196067
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author Dutta, Ambarish
Pattanaik, Sarthak
Choudhury, Rajendra
Nanda, Pritish
Sahu, Suvanand
Panigrahi, Rajendra
Padhi, Bijaya K.
Sahoo, Krushna Chandra
Mishra, P. R.
Panigrahi, Pinaki
Lekharu, Daisy
Stevens, Robert H.
author_facet Dutta, Ambarish
Pattanaik, Sarthak
Choudhury, Rajendra
Nanda, Pritish
Sahu, Suvanand
Panigrahi, Rajendra
Padhi, Bijaya K.
Sahoo, Krushna Chandra
Mishra, P. R.
Panigrahi, Pinaki
Lekharu, Daisy
Stevens, Robert H.
author_sort Dutta, Ambarish
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Migrant labourers living in the slums of urban and industrial patches across India make up a key sub-population so far controlling Tuberculosis (TB) in the country is concerned. This is because many TB patients from these communities- remain under reached by the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP) of India. This marginalized community usually seeks early-stage healthcare from “friendly neighbourhood” non-formal health providers (NFHPs). Because, RNTCP has limited capacity to involve the NFHPs, an implementation research project was conceived, whereby an external partner would engage with the NFHPs to enable them to identify early TB symptomatics from this key sub-population who would be then tested using Xpert MTB/RIF technology. Diagnosed TB cases among them would be referred promptly to RNTCP for treatment. This paper aimed to describe the project and its impact. METHODS: Adopting a quasi-experimental before-after design, four RNTCP units from two major urban-industrial areas of Odisha were selected for intervention, which spanned five quarters and covered 151,400 people, of which 30% were slum-dwelling migrants. Two similar units comprised the control population. The hypothesis was, reaching the under reached in the intervention area through NFHPs would increase TB notification from these traditionally under-notifying units. RNTCP notification data during intervention was compared with pre-intervention era, adjusted for contemporaneous changes in control population RESULTS: The project detected 488 Xpert(+) TB cases, of whom 466 were administered RNTCP treatment. This translated into notification of additional 198 new bacteriologically positive cases to RNTCP, a 30% notification surge, after adjustment for 2% decline in control. This meant an average quarterly increase in notification of 41.20(20.08, 62.31; p<0.001) cases. The increase was immediate, evident from the rise in level in the time series analysis by 50.42(10.28, 90.55; p = 0.02) cases. CONCLUSION: Engagement with NFHPs contributed to an increase in TB notification to RNTCP from key under reached, slum-dwelling migrant populations.
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spelling pubmed-59658302018-06-02 Impact of involvement of non-formal health providers on TB case notification among migrant slum-dwelling populations in Odisha, India Dutta, Ambarish Pattanaik, Sarthak Choudhury, Rajendra Nanda, Pritish Sahu, Suvanand Panigrahi, Rajendra Padhi, Bijaya K. Sahoo, Krushna Chandra Mishra, P. R. Panigrahi, Pinaki Lekharu, Daisy Stevens, Robert H. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Migrant labourers living in the slums of urban and industrial patches across India make up a key sub-population so far controlling Tuberculosis (TB) in the country is concerned. This is because many TB patients from these communities- remain under reached by the Revised National Tuberculosis Control Programme (RNTCP) of India. This marginalized community usually seeks early-stage healthcare from “friendly neighbourhood” non-formal health providers (NFHPs). Because, RNTCP has limited capacity to involve the NFHPs, an implementation research project was conceived, whereby an external partner would engage with the NFHPs to enable them to identify early TB symptomatics from this key sub-population who would be then tested using Xpert MTB/RIF technology. Diagnosed TB cases among them would be referred promptly to RNTCP for treatment. This paper aimed to describe the project and its impact. METHODS: Adopting a quasi-experimental before-after design, four RNTCP units from two major urban-industrial areas of Odisha were selected for intervention, which spanned five quarters and covered 151,400 people, of which 30% were slum-dwelling migrants. Two similar units comprised the control population. The hypothesis was, reaching the under reached in the intervention area through NFHPs would increase TB notification from these traditionally under-notifying units. RNTCP notification data during intervention was compared with pre-intervention era, adjusted for contemporaneous changes in control population RESULTS: The project detected 488 Xpert(+) TB cases, of whom 466 were administered RNTCP treatment. This translated into notification of additional 198 new bacteriologically positive cases to RNTCP, a 30% notification surge, after adjustment for 2% decline in control. This meant an average quarterly increase in notification of 41.20(20.08, 62.31; p<0.001) cases. The increase was immediate, evident from the rise in level in the time series analysis by 50.42(10.28, 90.55; p = 0.02) cases. CONCLUSION: Engagement with NFHPs contributed to an increase in TB notification to RNTCP from key under reached, slum-dwelling migrant populations. Public Library of Science 2018-05-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5965830/ /pubmed/29791449 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196067 Text en © 2018 Dutta 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
Dutta, Ambarish
Pattanaik, Sarthak
Choudhury, Rajendra
Nanda, Pritish
Sahu, Suvanand
Panigrahi, Rajendra
Padhi, Bijaya K.
Sahoo, Krushna Chandra
Mishra, P. R.
Panigrahi, Pinaki
Lekharu, Daisy
Stevens, Robert H.
Impact of involvement of non-formal health providers on TB case notification among migrant slum-dwelling populations in Odisha, India
title Impact of involvement of non-formal health providers on TB case notification among migrant slum-dwelling populations in Odisha, India
title_full Impact of involvement of non-formal health providers on TB case notification among migrant slum-dwelling populations in Odisha, India
title_fullStr Impact of involvement of non-formal health providers on TB case notification among migrant slum-dwelling populations in Odisha, India
title_full_unstemmed Impact of involvement of non-formal health providers on TB case notification among migrant slum-dwelling populations in Odisha, India
title_short Impact of involvement of non-formal health providers on TB case notification among migrant slum-dwelling populations in Odisha, India
title_sort impact of involvement of non-formal health providers on tb case notification among migrant slum-dwelling populations in odisha, india
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5965830/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29791449
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196067
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