Frank van Leth

Associate Professor Health Sciences

Health workers’ performance in the implementation of Patient Centred Tuberculosis Treatment (PCT) strategy under programmatic conditions in Tanzania: a cross sectional study


Journal article


A. Mkopi, N. Range, M. Amuri, E. Geubbels, F. Lwilla, S. Egwaga, Alexander Schulze, F. van Leth
BMC Health Services Research, 2013

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Mkopi, A., Range, N., Amuri, M., Geubbels, E., Lwilla, F., Egwaga, S., … van Leth, F. (2013). Health workers’ performance in the implementation of Patient Centred Tuberculosis Treatment (PCT) strategy under programmatic conditions in Tanzania: a cross sectional study. BMC Health Services Research.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Mkopi, A., N. Range, M. Amuri, E. Geubbels, F. Lwilla, S. Egwaga, Alexander Schulze, and F. van Leth. “Health Workers’ Performance in the Implementation of Patient Centred Tuberculosis Treatment (PCT) Strategy under Programmatic Conditions in Tanzania: a Cross Sectional Study.” BMC Health Services Research (2013).


MLA   Click to copy
Mkopi, A., et al. “Health Workers’ Performance in the Implementation of Patient Centred Tuberculosis Treatment (PCT) Strategy under Programmatic Conditions in Tanzania: a Cross Sectional Study.” BMC Health Services Research, 2013.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{a2013a,
  title = {Health workers’ performance in the implementation of Patient Centred Tuberculosis Treatment (PCT) strategy under programmatic conditions in Tanzania: a cross sectional study},
  year = {2013},
  journal = {BMC Health Services Research},
  author = {Mkopi, A. and Range, N. and Amuri, M. and Geubbels, E. and Lwilla, F. and Egwaga, S. and Schulze, Alexander and van Leth, F.}
}

Abstract

BackgroundPatient Centred Tuberculosis Treatment (PCT) is a promising treatment delivery strategy for Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB). It aims to improve adherence to treatment by giving patients the choice of having drug intake supervised at the health facility by a medical professional or at home by a supporter of their choice.MethodsA cross-sectional survey was undertaken in three districts of Tanzania during October 2007, one year after PCT was rolled out nationally. Semi-structured questionnaires were used to assess whether key elements of the PCT approach were being implemented, to evaluate supporters’ knowledge, to capture opinions on factors contributing to treatment completion, and to assess how treatment completion was measured. Transcripts from open-ended responses were analysed using framework analysis.ResultsInterviews were conducted with 127 TB patients, 107 treatment supporters and 70 health workers. In total, 25.2% of TB patients were not given a choice about the place of treatment by health workers, and only 13.7% of those given a choice reported that they were given adequate time to make their decision. Only 24.3% of treatment supporters confirmed that they were instructed how to complete patients’ treatment cards. Proper health education was the factor most frequently reported by health workers as favouring successful completion of TB treatment (45.7%). The majority of health workers (68.6%) said they checked returned blister packs to verify whether patients had taken their treatment, but only 20.0% checked patients’ treatment cards.ConclusionsThe provision of choice of treatment location, information on treatment, and guidance for treatment supporters need to be improved. There is a requirement for regular re-training of health workers with effective supportive supervision if successful implementation of the PCT approach is to be sustained.