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Journal Article > Research

"When treatment is more challenging than the disease": A qualitative study of MDR-TB patient retention

Shringarpure KS, Isaakidis P, Sagili KD, Baxi RK, Das M, Daftary A
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Abstract
BACKGROUND
One-fifth of the patients on multidrug-resistant tuberculosis treatment at the Drug-Resistant-TB (DR-TB) Site in Gujarat are lost-to-follow-up(LFU).

OBJECTIVE
To understand patients' and providers' perspectives on reasons for LFU and their suggestions to improve retention-in-care.

DESIGN
Qualitative study conducted between December 2013-March 2014, including in-depth interviews with LFU patients and DOT-providers, and a focus group discussion with DR-TB site supervisors. A thematic-network analysis approach was utilised.

RESULTS
Three sub-themes emerged: (i) Struggle with prolonged treatment; (ii) Strive against stigma and toward support; (iii) Divergent perceptions and practices. Daily injections, pill burden, DOT, migratory work, social problems, prior TB treatment, and adverse drugs effects were reported as major barriers to treatment adherence and retention-in-care by patients and providers. Some providers felt that despite their best efforts, LFU patients remain. Patient movements between private practitioners and traditional healers further influenced LFU.

CONCLUSION
The study points to a need for repeated patient counselling and education, improved co-ordination between various tiers of providers engaged in DR-TB care, collaboration between the public, private and traditional practitioners, and promotion of social and economic support to help patients adhere to MDR-TB treatment and avoid LFU.
Subject Area
antibiotic resistancetuberculosisantimicrobial resistance
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0150849
Published Date
09-Mar-2016
PubMed ID
26959366
Languages
English
Journal
PLOS One
Volume / Issue / Pages
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages e0150849
Issue Date
09-Mar-2016
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