Discontinuation of tuberculosis treatment among children in the Kampala Capital City Authority health facilities: a mixed-methods study
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Date
2021
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC
Abstract
Introduction: Discontinuation of tuberculosis treatment (DTT) among children in sub-Saharan Africa is a major
obstacle to effective tuberculosis (TB) control and has the potential to worsen the emergence of multi-drug
resistant TB and death. DTT in children is understudied in Uganda. We examined the level and factors associated
with DTT among children at four large health facilities in Kampala Capital City Authority and documented the
reasons for DTT from treatment supporters and healthcare provider perspectives.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of records for children < 15 years diagnosed and treated for TB
between January 2018 and December 2019. We held focus group discussions with treatment supporters and key
informant interviews with healthcare providers. We defined DTT as the stoppage of TB treatment for 30 or more
consecutive days. We used a stepwise generalized linear model to assess factors independently associated with DTT
and content analysis for the qualitative data reported using sub-themes.
Results: Of 312 participants enrolled, 35 (11.2%) had discontinued TB treatment. The reasons for DTT included lack
of privacy at healthcare facilities for children with TB and their treatment supporters, the disappearance of TB
symptoms following treatment initiation, poor implementation of the community-based directly observed therapy
short-course (CB-DOTS) strategy, insufficient funding to the TB program, and frequent stock-outs of TB drugs. DTT
was more likely during the continuation phase of TB treatment compared to the intensive phase (Adjusted odds
ratio (aOR), 5.22; 95% Confidence Interval (CI), 1.76–17.52) and when the treatment supporter was employed
compared to when the treatment supporter was unemployed (aOR, 3.60; 95% CI, 1.34–11.38).
Conclusion: Many children with TB discontinue TB treatment and this might exacerbate TB morbidity and mortality.
To mitigate DTT, healthcare providers should ensure children with TB and their treatment supporters are accorded
privacy during service provision and provide more information about TB symptom resolution and treatment duration
versus the need to complete treatment. The district and national TB control programs should address gaps in funding
to TB care, the supply of TB drugs, and the implementation of the CB-DOTS strategy.
Description
Keywords
Childhood tuberculosis, Tuberculosis treatment discontinuation, Children with tuberculosis, Uganda