Influence of patients’ living conditions on tuberculosis treatment outcomes in a South African health sub-district

South African Family Practice

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Influence of patients’ living conditions on tuberculosis treatment outcomes in a South African health sub-district
 
Creator Bongongo, Tombo van der Heever, Hendry Nzaumvila, Doudou K. Saidiya, Christian N.S.
 
Subject — living conditions; tuberculosis treatment outcomes; Tshwane health district; South Africa; public health
Description Background: Tuberculosis (TB) remains a serious public health concern because it continues devastating communities. This survey was conducted in the sub-district 2 of the Tshwane health district, South Africa. It aimed at determining the influence of patients’ living conditions on TB treatment outcomes. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) status, food security and exposure to cigarette smoke were considered as living conditions; and cure, death, default, failure and relapse were considered TB treatment outcomes.Methods: Record review using the Aitahealth database, clinic registers as well as a piloted, structured and administered questionnaire.Results: Convenience sampling applied; 180 respondents were obtained. Tuberculosis respondents with negative HIV status had a cure rate of 67.3% whilst those with positive HIV status had 37%. Tuberculosis respondents with good food security had 45.9% of cure rate. Tuberculosis respondents exposed to cigarette smoke had a death rate of 65.2%, while respondents not exposed to cigarette smoke showed 75% of cure rate.Conclusion: HIV status, food security and exposure to cigarette smoke, as components of living conditions, showed an association with TB treatment outcomes in the selected sample; in the sense HIV infection reduced the cure rate, increased the death and default rates of TB patients in the same sample. Good food security increased the cure rate of TB patients, but exposure to cigarette smoke decreased the cure rate and increased the death rate amongst respondents having TB treatment in the current survey.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor
Date 2020-08-25
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article —
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/safp.v62i1.5036
 
Source South African Family Practice; Vol 62, No 1 (2020): Part 3; 6 pages 2078-6204 2078-6190
 
Language eng
 
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https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/5036/6200 https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/5036/6199 https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/5036/6201 https://safpj.co.za/index.php/safpj/article/view/5036/6198
 
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Rights Copyright (c) 2020 Tombo Bongongo, Hendry van der Heever, Doudou K. Nzaumvila, Christian N.S. Saidiya https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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