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Effect of public-private interface agency in Patna and Mumbai, India: Does it alter durations and delays in care seeking for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis?

Background: Public–private interface agency (PPIA) intervention models in Patna (E. India) and Mumbai (W. India) for pulmonary drug-sensitive (DS) tuberculosis (TB) patients were evaluated over 2 years after maturity to examine effect on reduction of patient pathways and retention.  The models engag...

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Autores principales: Shah, Sanchi, Shah, Shimoni, Rangan, Sheela, Rai, Sonukumar, Lobo, Eunice, Kamble, Swaran, Dholakia, Yatin, Mistry, Nerges
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7221294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32490358
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13113.1
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author Shah, Sanchi
Shah, Shimoni
Rangan, Sheela
Rai, Sonukumar
Lobo, Eunice
Kamble, Swaran
Dholakia, Yatin
Mistry, Nerges
author_facet Shah, Sanchi
Shah, Shimoni
Rangan, Sheela
Rai, Sonukumar
Lobo, Eunice
Kamble, Swaran
Dholakia, Yatin
Mistry, Nerges
author_sort Shah, Sanchi
collection PubMed
description Background: Public–private interface agency (PPIA) intervention models in Patna (E. India) and Mumbai (W. India) for pulmonary drug-sensitive (DS) tuberculosis (TB) patients were evaluated over 2 years after maturity to examine effect on reduction of patient pathways and retention.  The models engaged private providers, diagnostic facilities and pharmacies into an effective network providing free diagnostic tests and treatment. Methods: A population-based retrospective study was undertaken to assess effectiveness of the PPIA model in care pathways of 64 (Patna) and 86 (Mumbai) patients through in-depth interviews conducted within 6 months of initiation treatments to identify types and facilities accessed, duration to diagnosis and treatment. Median durations based on facilities accessed were statistically analysed.  Comparisons were made with baseline values and endline pathways of patients accessing PPIA engaged/non-engaged facilities in private and public sectors. Results: Compared to non-engaged facilities, persons accessing engaged facilities at first point-of-care had shorter pathways (Mumbai: 32 vs 43 days), (Patna: 15 vs 40 days).  Duration for first care-seeking was considerably shorter for patients accessing PPIA in Patna and for both engaged and non-engaged private facilities in Mumbai (4 days).  Whilst PPIA engaged facilities diagnosed more cases than others, the RNTCP in Mumbai provided diagnosis early.  There was good retention of patients by PPIA-engaged (1 (st)) facilities (90% post-diagnosis in Patna) but this was affected by the hub-spoke referral system in Mumbai (13%). Second diagnosis is a common feature in Mumbai.  The spoke-hub model in Mumbai contributed considerably to treatment delay; PPIA-engaged providers were better at retaining patients post treatment initiation 11/25 (44%). Conclusion: PPIA-engaged facilities, accessed at onset, result in marked reduction in pathway durations.  Such initiatives should engage a critical mass of competent providers, proximal investigation facilities with enhanced disease awareness and literacy efforts amongst communities.  Patient movement should be minimized for early treatment and retention.
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spelling pubmed-72212942020-06-01 Effect of public-private interface agency in Patna and Mumbai, India: Does it alter durations and delays in care seeking for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis? Shah, Sanchi Shah, Shimoni Rangan, Sheela Rai, Sonukumar Lobo, Eunice Kamble, Swaran Dholakia, Yatin Mistry, Nerges Gates Open Res Research Article Background: Public–private interface agency (PPIA) intervention models in Patna (E. India) and Mumbai (W. India) for pulmonary drug-sensitive (DS) tuberculosis (TB) patients were evaluated over 2 years after maturity to examine effect on reduction of patient pathways and retention.  The models engaged private providers, diagnostic facilities and pharmacies into an effective network providing free diagnostic tests and treatment. Methods: A population-based retrospective study was undertaken to assess effectiveness of the PPIA model in care pathways of 64 (Patna) and 86 (Mumbai) patients through in-depth interviews conducted within 6 months of initiation treatments to identify types and facilities accessed, duration to diagnosis and treatment. Median durations based on facilities accessed were statistically analysed.  Comparisons were made with baseline values and endline pathways of patients accessing PPIA engaged/non-engaged facilities in private and public sectors. Results: Compared to non-engaged facilities, persons accessing engaged facilities at first point-of-care had shorter pathways (Mumbai: 32 vs 43 days), (Patna: 15 vs 40 days).  Duration for first care-seeking was considerably shorter for patients accessing PPIA in Patna and for both engaged and non-engaged private facilities in Mumbai (4 days).  Whilst PPIA engaged facilities diagnosed more cases than others, the RNTCP in Mumbai provided diagnosis early.  There was good retention of patients by PPIA-engaged (1 (st)) facilities (90% post-diagnosis in Patna) but this was affected by the hub-spoke referral system in Mumbai (13%). Second diagnosis is a common feature in Mumbai.  The spoke-hub model in Mumbai contributed considerably to treatment delay; PPIA-engaged providers were better at retaining patients post treatment initiation 11/25 (44%). Conclusion: PPIA-engaged facilities, accessed at onset, result in marked reduction in pathway durations.  Such initiatives should engage a critical mass of competent providers, proximal investigation facilities with enhanced disease awareness and literacy efforts amongst communities.  Patient movement should be minimized for early treatment and retention. F1000 Research Limited 2020-04-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7221294/ /pubmed/32490358 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13113.1 Text en Copyright: © 2020 Shah S et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Shah, Sanchi
Shah, Shimoni
Rangan, Sheela
Rai, Sonukumar
Lobo, Eunice
Kamble, Swaran
Dholakia, Yatin
Mistry, Nerges
Effect of public-private interface agency in Patna and Mumbai, India: Does it alter durations and delays in care seeking for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis?
title Effect of public-private interface agency in Patna and Mumbai, India: Does it alter durations and delays in care seeking for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis?
title_full Effect of public-private interface agency in Patna and Mumbai, India: Does it alter durations and delays in care seeking for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis?
title_fullStr Effect of public-private interface agency in Patna and Mumbai, India: Does it alter durations and delays in care seeking for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis?
title_full_unstemmed Effect of public-private interface agency in Patna and Mumbai, India: Does it alter durations and delays in care seeking for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis?
title_short Effect of public-private interface agency in Patna and Mumbai, India: Does it alter durations and delays in care seeking for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis?
title_sort effect of public-private interface agency in patna and mumbai, india: does it alter durations and delays in care seeking for drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7221294/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32490358
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13113.1
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