AI Article Synopsis

  • Tuberculosis (TB) remains a significant global public health issue, particularly in India, which has a high burden of cases, with a 30% gap in incident versus notified cases indicating many are undiagnosed.
  • The review of diagnostic gaps in TB care involved extensive research, analyzing studies to pinpoint reasons for delayed diagnoses, including lack of access to tests, individual risk factors, and underutilization of available services.
  • To effectively combat TB and close these gaps, it’s crucial to enhance access to diagnostic facilities, encourage individuals to seek care, and ensure proper diagnosis for those already in healthcare systems.

Article Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) continues to be one of the important public health concerns globally, and India is among the seven countries with the largest burden of TB. There has been a consistent increase in the notifications of TB cases across the globe. However, the 2018 estimates envisage a gap of about 30% between the incident and notified cases of TB, indicating a significant number of patients who remain undiagnosed or 'missed'. It is important to understand who is 'missed', find this population, and provide quality care. Given these complexities, we reviewed the diagnostic gaps in the care cascade for TB. We searched Medline via PubMed and CENTRAL databases via the Cochrane Library. The search strategy for PubMed was tailored to individual databases and was as: ((((((tuberculosis[Title/Abstract]) OR (TB[Title/Abstract])) OR (koch *[Title/Abstract])) OR ("tuberculosis"[MeSH Terms]))) AND (((diagnos *) AND ("diagnosis"[MeSH Terms])))). Furthermore, we screened the references list of the potentially relevant studies to seek additional studies. Studies retrieved from these electronic searches and relevant references included in the bibliography of those studies were reviewed. Original studies in English that assessed the causes of diagnostic gaps and interventions used to address them were included. Delays in diagnosis were found to be attributable to both the individuals' and the health system's capacity to diagnose and promptly commence treatment. This review provides insights into the diagnostic gaps in a cascade of care for TB and different interventions adopted in studies to close this gap. The major diagnostic gaps identified in this review are as follows: people may not have access to TB diagnostic tests, individuals are at a higher risk of missed diagnosis, services are available but people may not seek care with a diagnostic facility, and patients are not diagnosed despite reaching health facilities. Therefore, reaching the goal to End TB requires putting in place models and methods to provide prompt and quality assured diagnosis to populations at par.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9315562PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed7070136DOI Listing

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