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Priority Activities in Child and Adolescent Tuberculosis to Close the Policy-Practice Gap in Low- and Middle-Income Countries

Authors :
Karen du Preez
Betina Mendez Alcântara Gabardo
Sushil K. Kabra
Rina Triasih
Trisasi Lestari
Margaret Kal
Bazarragchaa Tsogt
Gantsetseg Dorj
Enkhtsetseg Purev
Thu Anh Nguyen
Lenny Naidoo
Lindiwe Mvusi
Hendrik Simon Schaaf
Anneke C. Hesseling
Andrea Maciel de Oliveira Rossoni
Anna Cristina Calçada Carvalho
Claudete Aparecida Araújo Cardoso
Clemax Couto Sant’Anna
Danielle Gomes Dell’ Orti
Fernanda Dockhorn Costa
Liliana Romero Vega
Maria de Fátima Pombo Sant’Anna
Nguyen Binh Hoa
Phan Huu Phuc
Attannon Arnauld Fiogbe
Dissou Affolabi
Gisèle Badoum
Abdoul Risgou Ouédraogo
Tandaogo Saouadogo
Adjima Combary
Albert Kuate Kuate
Bisso Ngono Annie Prudence
Aboubakar Sidiki Magassouba
Adama Marie Bangoura
Alphazazi Soumana
Georges Hermana
Hervé Gando
Nafissatou Fall
Barnabé Gning
Mohammed Fall Dogo
Olivia Mbitikon
Manon Deffense
Kevin Zimba
Chishala Chabala
Moorine Penninah Sekadde
Henry Luzze
Stavia Turyahabwe
John Paul Dongo
Constantino Lopes
Milena dos Santos
Joshua Reginald Francis
Magnolia Arango-Loboguerrero
Carlos M. Perez-Velez
Kobto Ghislain Koura
Stephen M. Graham
Source :
Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland). 11(2)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Over the past 15 years, and despite many difficulties, significant progress has been made to advance child and adolescent tuberculosis (TB) care. Despite increasing availability of safe and effective treatment and prevention options, TB remains a global health priority as a major cause of child and adolescent morbidity and mortality—over one and a half million children and adolescents develop TB each year. A history of the global public health perspective on child and adolescent TB is followed by 12 narratives detailing challenges and progress in 19 TB endemic low and middle-income countries. Overarching challenges include: under-detection and under-reporting of child and adolescent TB; poor implementation and reporting of contact investigation and TB preventive treatment services; the need for health systems strengthening to deliver effective, decentralized services; and lack of integration between TB programs and child health services. The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant negative impact on case detection and treatment outcomes. Child and adolescent TB working groups can address country-specific challenges to close the policy–practice gaps by developing and supporting decentral ized models of care, strengthening clinical and laboratory diagnosis, including of multidrug-resistant TB, providing recommended options for treatment of disease and infection, and forging strong collaborations across relevant health sectors.

Details

ISSN :
20760817
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f05dc1ed1d9e0f1aeb071531777b5622