| Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease | |
| “Together against Tuberculosis”: Cascade of Care of Patients Referred by the Private Health Care Providers in the Kyrgyz Republic | |
| article | |
| Dinara Madybaeva1  Aiymgul Duishekeeva2  Anna Meteliuk4  Aizat Kulzhabaeva2  Abdullaat Kadyrov6  Natalia Shumskaia1  Ajay M. V. Kumar7  | |
| [1] Public Foundation “AFEW KG”;Public Foundation “KNCV KG”;Department of Phthisiology;International Charitable Foundation Alliance for Public Health;Department of Public Health;National Center for Phthisiology of MoH Kyrgyzstan;International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease;International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, South-East Asia Office, C-6 Qutub Institutional Area;Department of Community Medicine, Yenepoya Medical College, Yenepoya ,(Deemed to be University), University Road | |
| 关键词: Kyrgyz Republic; TB presumptive; failure; operational research; SORT IT; key population; private sector; | |
| DOI : 10.3390/tropicalmed8060316 | |
| 学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合) | |
| 来源: mdpi | |
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【 摘 要 】
Until 2021, in the Kyrgyz Republic, tuberculosis (TB) was diagnosed and treated only in the public sector. With funding support of the STOP–TB partnership, the private providers in four regions of the country and Bishkek city were mapped, trained and incentivized to screen for and identify presumptive TB patients and refer them to the public facilities for diagnosis and treatment. In this study, we describe the cascade of care of such patients. This was a cohort study involving secondary analysis of routine data. Of 79,352 patients screened during February 2021–March 2022, 2511 (3%) had presumptive TB, of whom 903 (36%) were not tested for TB [pre-diagnostic loss to follow-up]. A total of 323 (13%) patients were diagnosed with TB, of whom, 42 (13%) were not started on treatment [pre-treatment loss to follow-up]. Among 257 patients eligible for outcome assessment, 197 (77%) had treatment success, 29 (11%) were lost-to-follow-up, 13 (5%) died, 4 (2%) had treatment failure and 14 (5%) were not evaluated. While this donor-funded, pioneering initiative was successful in engaging the private sector, we recommend that the national TB programme scales up the initiative nationally with dedicated budgets, activities and plans to monitor progress. Qualitative research is urgently needed to understand the reasons for the gaps in the care cascade.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
【 预 览 】
| Files | Size | Format | View |
|---|---|---|---|
| RO202307010002458ZK.pdf | 1026KB |
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