Tuberculosis-related knowledge is associated with patient outcomes in shantytown residents; results from a cohort study, Peru.

J Infect

IFHAD: Innovation For Health And Development, Laboratory of Research and Development #218, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, San Martin de Porres, Lima, Peru; Infectious Diseases & Immunity, Imperial College London, and Wellcome Trust Imperial College Centre for Global Health Research, London, UK. Electronic address:

Published: September 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study highlights that people with limited knowledge about tuberculosis, especially older individuals and those without formal education, face delays in treatment and poorer outcomes.
  • A significant portion of tuberculosis patients experienced a median delay of 60 days before receiving treatment, with factors like poverty and disease severity worsening this delay.
  • The research suggests that increasing knowledge about tuberculosis through health education could lead to better treatment outcomes and reduce the likelihood of recurrence.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Tuberculosis is frequent among poor and marginalized people whose limited tuberculosis-related knowledge may impair healthcare access. We characterised tuberculosis-related knowledge and associations with delayed treatment and treatment outcome.

Methods: Tuberculosis patients (n = 943), people being tested for suspected tuberculosis (n = 2020), and randomly selected healthy controls (n = 476) in 16 periurban shantytowns were interviewed characterizing: socio-demographic factors; tuberculosis risk-factors; and patients' treatment delay. Principle component analysis was used to generate a tuberculosis-related knowledge score. Patients were followed-up for median 7.7 years. Factors associated with tuberculosis treatment delay, treatment outcome and tuberculosis recurrence were assessed using linear, logistic and Cox regression.

Results: Tuberculosis-related knowledge was poor, especially in older people who had not completed schooling and had never been diagnosed with tuberculosis. Tuberculosis treatment delay was median 60 days and was more delayed for patients who were poorer, older, had more severe tuberculosis and in only unadjusted analysis with incomplete schooling and low tuberculosis-related knowledge (all p ≤ 0.03). Lower than median tuberculosis-related knowledge was associated with tuberculosis recurrence (unadjusted hazard ratio = 2.1, p = 0.008), and this association was independent of co-morbidities, disease severity and demographic factors (multiple regression adjusted hazard ratio = 2.6, p = 0.008).

Conclusions: Low tuberculosis-related knowledge independently predicted tuberculosis recurrence. Thus health education may improve tuberculosis prognosis.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7617110PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jinf.2015.05.010DOI Listing

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