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Community health workers augment the cascade of TB detection to care in urban slums of two metro cities in India

BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis Health Action Learning Initiative (THALI) funded by USAID is a person-centered initiative, supporting vulnerable urban populations to gain access to TB services. THALI trained and placed 112 Community health workers (CHWs) to detect and support individuals with TB symptoms o...

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Autores principales: Potty, Rajaram Subramanian, Kumarasamy, Karthikeyan, Adepu, Rajesham, Reddy, Ramesh Chandra, Singarajipura, Anil, Siddappa, Poornima Bathi, Sreenivasa, Prarthana B, Thalinja, Raghavendra, Lakkappa, Mohan Harnahalli, Swamickan, Reuben, Shah, Amar, Panibatla, Vikas, Dasari, Ramesh, Washington, Reynold
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Society of Global Health 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8285758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34326992
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.11.04042
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author Potty, Rajaram Subramanian
Kumarasamy, Karthikeyan
Adepu, Rajesham
Reddy, Ramesh Chandra
Singarajipura, Anil
Siddappa, Poornima Bathi
Sreenivasa, Prarthana B
Thalinja, Raghavendra
Lakkappa, Mohan Harnahalli
Swamickan, Reuben
Shah, Amar
Panibatla, Vikas
Dasari, Ramesh
Washington, Reynold
author_facet Potty, Rajaram Subramanian
Kumarasamy, Karthikeyan
Adepu, Rajesham
Reddy, Ramesh Chandra
Singarajipura, Anil
Siddappa, Poornima Bathi
Sreenivasa, Prarthana B
Thalinja, Raghavendra
Lakkappa, Mohan Harnahalli
Swamickan, Reuben
Shah, Amar
Panibatla, Vikas
Dasari, Ramesh
Washington, Reynold
author_sort Potty, Rajaram Subramanian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis Health Action Learning Initiative (THALI) funded by USAID is a person-centered initiative, supporting vulnerable urban populations to gain access to TB services. THALI trained and placed 112 Community health workers (CHWs) to detect and support individuals with TB symptoms or disease within urban slums in two cities, Hyderabad and Bengaluru, covering a population of about 3 million. METHODS: CHWs visited the slums once in a fortnight. They conducted TB awareness activities. They referred individuals with TB symptoms for sputum testing to nearest public sector laboratories. They visited those testing TB positive, once a fortnight in the intensive phase, and once a month thereafter. They supported TB patients and families with counselling, contact screening and social scheme linkages. They complemented the shortfall in urban TB government field staff numbers and their capacity to engage with TB patients. Data on CHWs’ patient referral for TB diagnosis and treatment support activities was entered into a database and analyzed to examine CHWs’ role in the cascade of TB care. We compared achievements of six monthly referral cohorts from September 2016 to February 2019. RESULTS: Overall, 31 617 (approximately 1%) of slum population were identified as TB symptomatic and referred for diagnosis. Among the referred persons, 23 976 (76%) underwent testing of which 3841 (16%) were TB positive. Overall, 3812 (99%) were initiated on treatment and 2760 (72%) agreed for regular follow up by the CHWs. Fifty-seven percent of 2952 referred were tested in the first cohort, against 86% of 8315 in the last cohort. The annualized case detection rate through CHW referrals in Bengaluru increased from 5.5 to 52.0 per 100 000 during the period, while in Hyderabad it was 35.4 initially and increased up to 118.9 per 100 000 persons. The treatment success rate was 87.1% among 193 in the first cohort vs 91.3% among 677 in the last cohort. CONCLUSIONS: CHWs in urban slums augment TB detection to care cascade. Their performance and TB treatment outcomes improve over time. It would be important to examine the cost per TB case detected and successfully treated.
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spelling pubmed-82857582021-07-28 Community health workers augment the cascade of TB detection to care in urban slums of two metro cities in India Potty, Rajaram Subramanian Kumarasamy, Karthikeyan Adepu, Rajesham Reddy, Ramesh Chandra Singarajipura, Anil Siddappa, Poornima Bathi Sreenivasa, Prarthana B Thalinja, Raghavendra Lakkappa, Mohan Harnahalli Swamickan, Reuben Shah, Amar Panibatla, Vikas Dasari, Ramesh Washington, Reynold J Glob Health Articles BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis Health Action Learning Initiative (THALI) funded by USAID is a person-centered initiative, supporting vulnerable urban populations to gain access to TB services. THALI trained and placed 112 Community health workers (CHWs) to detect and support individuals with TB symptoms or disease within urban slums in two cities, Hyderabad and Bengaluru, covering a population of about 3 million. METHODS: CHWs visited the slums once in a fortnight. They conducted TB awareness activities. They referred individuals with TB symptoms for sputum testing to nearest public sector laboratories. They visited those testing TB positive, once a fortnight in the intensive phase, and once a month thereafter. They supported TB patients and families with counselling, contact screening and social scheme linkages. They complemented the shortfall in urban TB government field staff numbers and their capacity to engage with TB patients. Data on CHWs’ patient referral for TB diagnosis and treatment support activities was entered into a database and analyzed to examine CHWs’ role in the cascade of TB care. We compared achievements of six monthly referral cohorts from September 2016 to February 2019. RESULTS: Overall, 31 617 (approximately 1%) of slum population were identified as TB symptomatic and referred for diagnosis. Among the referred persons, 23 976 (76%) underwent testing of which 3841 (16%) were TB positive. Overall, 3812 (99%) were initiated on treatment and 2760 (72%) agreed for regular follow up by the CHWs. Fifty-seven percent of 2952 referred were tested in the first cohort, against 86% of 8315 in the last cohort. The annualized case detection rate through CHW referrals in Bengaluru increased from 5.5 to 52.0 per 100 000 during the period, while in Hyderabad it was 35.4 initially and increased up to 118.9 per 100 000 persons. The treatment success rate was 87.1% among 193 in the first cohort vs 91.3% among 677 in the last cohort. CONCLUSIONS: CHWs in urban slums augment TB detection to care cascade. Their performance and TB treatment outcomes improve over time. It would be important to examine the cost per TB case detected and successfully treated. International Society of Global Health 2021-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8285758/ /pubmed/34326992 http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.11.04042 Text en Copyright © 2021 by the Journal of Global Health. All rights reserved. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Articles
Potty, Rajaram Subramanian
Kumarasamy, Karthikeyan
Adepu, Rajesham
Reddy, Ramesh Chandra
Singarajipura, Anil
Siddappa, Poornima Bathi
Sreenivasa, Prarthana B
Thalinja, Raghavendra
Lakkappa, Mohan Harnahalli
Swamickan, Reuben
Shah, Amar
Panibatla, Vikas
Dasari, Ramesh
Washington, Reynold
Community health workers augment the cascade of TB detection to care in urban slums of two metro cities in India
title Community health workers augment the cascade of TB detection to care in urban slums of two metro cities in India
title_full Community health workers augment the cascade of TB detection to care in urban slums of two metro cities in India
title_fullStr Community health workers augment the cascade of TB detection to care in urban slums of two metro cities in India
title_full_unstemmed Community health workers augment the cascade of TB detection to care in urban slums of two metro cities in India
title_short Community health workers augment the cascade of TB detection to care in urban slums of two metro cities in India
title_sort community health workers augment the cascade of tb detection to care in urban slums of two metro cities in india
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8285758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34326992
http://dx.doi.org/10.7189/jogh.11.04042
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