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Integration of tobacco cessation and tuberculosis management by NGOs in urban India: a mixed-methods study

Authors :
H Verma
Nancy A. Rigotti
Rony Zachariah
A Malekar
Himanshu A Gupte
Amol R Dongre
Vaibhav Thawal
Leni Chaudhuri
Karuna D. Sagili
Source :
Public Health Action. 8:50-58
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, 2018.

Abstract

Setting and objectives: Tobacco use compromises tuberculosis (TB) treatment outcomes. Tobacco cessation is beneficial to TB patients at the individual level and from the perspective of a larger spectrum of non-communicable diseases associated with tobacco use. We assessed feasibility, effectiveness and provider perceptions on integrating brief tobacco cessation advice into routine TB care by DOTS providers from 27 TB treatment centres run by three non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in urban India. Design: A mixed-methods study (triangulation design) involving analysis of programme data and semi-structured interviews (quantitative) and thematic analysis of focus group discussions of TB treatment providers (qualitative) regarding brief advice and cessation support provided to self-reported tobacco users from August 2015 to July 2017. Results: All 27 centres initiated tobacco cessation. Of 2132 registered TB patients, 377 (18%) were tobacco users, 333 (88%) of whom used smokeless tobacco. There was a progressive drop in documentation of tobacco status at each visit, reaching respectively 36% and 30% at the end of treatment for new and retreatment TB patients. Seven-day point prevalence abstinence at 6 months was 32% among new and 15% among retreatment cases. Enablers for integration included NGO collaboration, supervision and capacity building. Challenges included providers spending 15-45 min per patient (10 min recommended), multiple addictions, documentation load, self-reporting and social normalisation of tobacco. Conclusions: Integration of tobacco cessation into routine TB care in an urban NGO setting was feasible, although without continued support, rigour in documentation declined. This should be scaled up with special attention paid to tackling smokeless tobacco and related operational challenges.

Details

ISSN :
22208372
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Public Health Action
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7103d4f6a93f2aceb88fa4ad9397d702
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5588/pha.17.0085