Title
Patient-led active tuberculosis case-finding in the democratic republic of the Congo
Other title
Dépistage de la tuberculose active par les patients en république démocratique du Congo Búsqueda de casos de tuberculosis activa dirigida por pacientes en la república democrática del Congo
Date Issued
01 January 2018
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
André E.
Rusumba O.
Ngongo P.
Sanduku P.
Munguakonkwa Elvis M.
Ndwanyi Celestin H.
Rusumba Alain I.
Mulume Musafiri E.
Kabuayi J.P.
de Waroux O.L.P.
Aït-Khaled N.
Delmée M.
Zech F.
Imperial College London
Publisher(s)
World Health Organization
Abstract
Objective To investigate the effect of using volunteer screeners in active tuberculosis case-finding in South Kivu, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, especially among groups at high risk of tuberculosis infection. Methods To identify and screen high-risk groups in remote communities, we trained volunteer screeners, mainly those who had themselves received treatment for tuberculosis or had a family history of the disease. A non-profit organization was created and screeners received training on the disease and its transmission at 3-day workshops. Screeners recorded the number of people screened, reporting a prolonged cough and who attended a clinic for testing, as well as test results. Data were evaluated every quarter during the 3-year period of the intervention (2014–2016). Findings Acceptability of the intervention was high. Volunteers screened 650 434 individuals in their communities, 73 418 of whom reported a prolonged cough; 50 368 subsequently attended a clinic for tuberculosis testing. Tuberculosis was diagnosed in 1 in 151 people screened, costing 0.29 United States dollars (US$) per person screened and US$ 44 per person diagnosed. Although members of high-risk groups with poorer access to health care represented only 5.1% (33 002/650 434) of those screened, they contributed 19.7% (845/4300) of tuberculosis diagnoses (1 diagnosis per 39 screened). The intervention resulted in an additional 4300 sputum-smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis diagnoses, 42% (4 300/10 247) of the provincial total for that period. Conclusion Patient-led active tuberculosis case-finding represents a valuable complement to traditional case-finding, and should be used to assist health systems in the elimination of tuberculosis.
Start page
522
End page
530
Volume
96
Issue
8
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Salud pública, Salud ambiental Epidemiología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85053720024
PubMed ID
Source
Bulletin of the World Health Organization
ISSN of the container
00429686
Sponsor(s)
Each volunteer group defined and organized their active case-finding activities, including how to target screening of people at high risk of tuberculosis. Screeners recorded whether those screened belonged to any of the high-risk groups: people residing in a household with a patient receiving tuberculosis treatment or in a prison, mining community or military base. Financial incentives: Each group received US$ 30 per quarter for administration and transport, and volunteer screeners received US$ 0.50 per symptomatic person who attended for tuberculosis testing. Payments were made after data validation in the quarterly notification report by clinic and provincial staff, subject to the availability of funds. The intervention also paid each clinic US$ 0.50 per diagnostic test performed, to remunerate the workload associated with increased patient referrals. Funding: The intervention was fully externally funded from the end of 2013 until the end of 2014; reduced external funding continued until the end of 2016. US$: United States dollars.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus