A qualitative meta-synthesis of facilitators and barriers to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in Nigeria

Abstract Background Despite progress in tuberculosis (TB) control globally, TB continues to be a leading cause of death from infectious diseases, claiming 1.2 million lives in 2018; 214,000 of these deaths were due to drug resistant strains. Of the estimated 10 million cases globally in 2018, 24% we...

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Main Authors: Charity Oga-Omenka, Lawrence Wakdet, Dick Menzies, Christina Zarowsky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-02-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10173-5
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spelling doaj-d472936c22a142ba998d3ee899badece2021-02-07T12:04:02ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-02-0121111210.1186/s12889-021-10173-5A qualitative meta-synthesis of facilitators and barriers to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in NigeriaCharity Oga-Omenka0Lawrence Wakdet1Dick Menzies2Christina Zarowsky3School of Public Health of the University of Montreal (ESPUM)Institute of Human Virology NigeriaMcGill University International TB CentreSchool of Public Health of the University of Montreal (ESPUM)Abstract Background Despite progress in tuberculosis (TB) control globally, TB continues to be a leading cause of death from infectious diseases, claiming 1.2 million lives in 2018; 214,000 of these deaths were due to drug resistant strains. Of the estimated 10 million cases globally in 2018, 24% were in Africa, with Nigeria and South Africa making up most of these numbers. Nigeria ranks 6th in the world for TB burden, with an estimated 4.3% multi-drug resistance in new cases. However, the country had one of the lowest case detection rates, estimated at 24% of incident cases in 2018 - well below the WHO STOP TB target of 84%. This rate highlights the need to understand contextual issues influencing tuberculosis management in Nigeria. Our synthesis was aimed at synthesizing qualitative evidence on factors influencing TB care in Nigeria. Methods A three-stage thematic meta-synthesis of qualitative studies was used to identify barriers and facilitators to tuberculosis case finding and treatment in Nigeria. A search of eleven databases was conducted. The date of publication was limited to 2006 to June 2020. We analyzed articles using a three-stage process, resulting in coding, descriptive subthemes and analytical themes. Results Our final synthesis of 10 articles resulted in several categories including community and family involvement, education and knowledge, attitudes and stigma, alternative care options, health system factors (including coverage and human resource), gender, and direct and indirect cost of care. These were grouped into three major themes: individual factors; interpersonal influences; and health system factors. Conclusion Case finding and treatment for TB in Nigeria currently depends more on individual patients presenting voluntarily to the hospital for care, necessitating an understanding of patient behaviors towards TB diagnosis and treatment. Our synthesis has identified several related factors that shape patients’ behavior towards TB management at individual, community and health system levels that can inform future interventions.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10173-5TB case findingTB treatmentNigeriaQualitative meta-synthesisBarriers and facilitators
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charity Oga-Omenka
Lawrence Wakdet
Dick Menzies
Christina Zarowsky
spellingShingle Charity Oga-Omenka
Lawrence Wakdet
Dick Menzies
Christina Zarowsky
A qualitative meta-synthesis of facilitators and barriers to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in Nigeria
BMC Public Health
TB case finding
TB treatment
Nigeria
Qualitative meta-synthesis
Barriers and facilitators
author_facet Charity Oga-Omenka
Lawrence Wakdet
Dick Menzies
Christina Zarowsky
author_sort Charity Oga-Omenka
title A qualitative meta-synthesis of facilitators and barriers to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in Nigeria
title_short A qualitative meta-synthesis of facilitators and barriers to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in Nigeria
title_full A qualitative meta-synthesis of facilitators and barriers to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in Nigeria
title_fullStr A qualitative meta-synthesis of facilitators and barriers to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed A qualitative meta-synthesis of facilitators and barriers to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in Nigeria
title_sort qualitative meta-synthesis of facilitators and barriers to tuberculosis diagnosis and treatment in nigeria
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Abstract Background Despite progress in tuberculosis (TB) control globally, TB continues to be a leading cause of death from infectious diseases, claiming 1.2 million lives in 2018; 214,000 of these deaths were due to drug resistant strains. Of the estimated 10 million cases globally in 2018, 24% were in Africa, with Nigeria and South Africa making up most of these numbers. Nigeria ranks 6th in the world for TB burden, with an estimated 4.3% multi-drug resistance in new cases. However, the country had one of the lowest case detection rates, estimated at 24% of incident cases in 2018 - well below the WHO STOP TB target of 84%. This rate highlights the need to understand contextual issues influencing tuberculosis management in Nigeria. Our synthesis was aimed at synthesizing qualitative evidence on factors influencing TB care in Nigeria. Methods A three-stage thematic meta-synthesis of qualitative studies was used to identify barriers and facilitators to tuberculosis case finding and treatment in Nigeria. A search of eleven databases was conducted. The date of publication was limited to 2006 to June 2020. We analyzed articles using a three-stage process, resulting in coding, descriptive subthemes and analytical themes. Results Our final synthesis of 10 articles resulted in several categories including community and family involvement, education and knowledge, attitudes and stigma, alternative care options, health system factors (including coverage and human resource), gender, and direct and indirect cost of care. These were grouped into three major themes: individual factors; interpersonal influences; and health system factors. Conclusion Case finding and treatment for TB in Nigeria currently depends more on individual patients presenting voluntarily to the hospital for care, necessitating an understanding of patient behaviors towards TB diagnosis and treatment. Our synthesis has identified several related factors that shape patients’ behavior towards TB management at individual, community and health system levels that can inform future interventions.
topic TB case finding
TB treatment
Nigeria
Qualitative meta-synthesis
Barriers and facilitators
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10173-5
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