Healthcare seeking patterns for TB symptoms : findings from the first national TB prevalence survey of South Africa, 2017–2019
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Date
Authors
Moyo, Sizulu
Ismail, Farzana
Mkhondo, Nkateko
Van der Walt, Martie
Dlamini, Sicelo S.
Mthiyane, Thuli
Naidoo, Inbarani
Zuma, Khangelani
Tadolini, Marina
Law, Irwin
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Abstract
BACKGROUND : Although tuberculosis (TB) symptoms have limited sensitivity they remain an important entry point into the TB care cascade. OBJECTIVES : To investigate self-reported healthcare seeking for TB symptoms in participants in a community- based survey. METHODS : We compared reasons for not seeking care in participants reporting 1 of four TB screening symptoms (cough, weight loss, night sweats, fever) in the first South African national TB prevalence survey (2017–2019). We used logistic regression analyses to identify sociodemographic and clinical characteristics associated with healthcare seeking. RESULTS : 5,168/35,191 (14.7%) survey participants reported TB symptoms and 3,442/5168 had not sought healthcare. 2,064/3,442(60.0%) participants intended to seek care, 912 (26.5%) regarded symptoms as benign, 399 (11.6%) reported access barriers(distance and cost), 36 (1.0%) took other medications and 20(0.6%) reported health system barriers. Of the 57/ 98 symptomatic participants diagnosed with bacteriologically confirmed TB who had not sought care: 38(66.7%) intended to do so, 8(14.0%) regarded symptoms as benign, and 6 (10.5%) reported access barriers. Among these 98, those with unknown HIV status(OR 0.16 95% CI 0.03–0.82), p = 0.03 and those who smoked tobacco products(OR 0.39, 95% CI 0.17–0.89, p = 0.03) were significantly less likely to seek care. CONCLUSIONS : People with TB symptoms delayed seeking healthcare, many regarded symptoms as benign while others faced access barriers. Those with unknown HIV status were significantly less likely to seek care. Strengthening community-based TB awareness and screening programmes together with self-screening models could increase awareness of the significance of TB symptoms and contribute to improving healthcare seeking and enable many people with TB to enter the TB care cascade.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : All relevant data are
within the paper and its Supporting Information
files.
SUPPORTING INFORMATION : TABLE S1. Reasons for not seeking care among participants with symptoms. TABLE S2. Reasons for not seeking care for TB symptoms among participants who reported cough of 2 weeks with or without any other screening symptoms. TABLE S3. Reasons for not seeking care among participants who reported symptoms by symptom type and symptom combinations. TABLE S4. Factors associated with self-reported care seeking for TB symptoms among participants who reported cough of 2 weeks with or any other screening symptoms in a community survey. DATA S1. Minimum dataset.
SUPPORTING INFORMATION : TABLE S1. Reasons for not seeking care among participants with symptoms. TABLE S2. Reasons for not seeking care for TB symptoms among participants who reported cough of 2 weeks with or without any other screening symptoms. TABLE S3. Reasons for not seeking care among participants who reported symptoms by symptom type and symptom combinations. TABLE S4. Factors associated with self-reported care seeking for TB symptoms among participants who reported cough of 2 weeks with or any other screening symptoms in a community survey. DATA S1. Minimum dataset.
Keywords
Tuberculosis (TB), Symptoms, Care, Screening, SDG-03: Good health and well-being
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-03:Good heatlh and well-being
Citation
Moyo, S., Ismail, F., Mkhondo, N., Van der Walt, M., Dlamini, S.S., Mthiyane, T., et al. (2023) Healthcare seeking patterns for TB symptoms: Findings from the first national TB prevalence survey of South Africa, 2017–2019. PLoS One 18(3): e0282125. https://DOI.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282125.
