AI Article Synopsis

  • Airborne pathogens like Mycobacterium tuberculosis in healthcare settings pose significant risks to both health workers and patients, particularly in South Africa where a 3-year project revealed critical issues in tuberculosis infection prevention and control (TB-IPC).
  • Key findings highlight problems such as fragmented policies, clinic congestion, and inadequate facility designs that hinder effective TB-IPC interventions, with modeling studies demonstrating their economic viability in addressing tuberculosis burdens.
  • The report advocates for improved coordination in policymaking, better clinic designs, budget allocations for TB-IPC implementation, and further research to enhance screening methods and patient management strategies in primary healthcare clinics.

Article Abstract

In clinical settings where airborne pathogens, such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis, are prevalent, they constitute an important threat to health workers and people accessing healthcare. We report key insights from a 3-year project conducted in primary healthcare clinics in South Africa, alongside other recent tuberculosis infection prevention and control (TB-IPC) research. We discuss the fragmentation of TB-IPC policies and budgets; the characteristics of individuals attending clinics with prevalent pulmonary tuberculosis; clinic congestion and patient flow; clinic design and natural ventilation; and the facility-level determinants of the implementation (or not) of TB-IPC interventions. We present modeling studies that describe the contribution of M. tuberculosis transmission in clinics to the community tuberculosis burden and economic evaluations showing that TB-IPC interventions are highly cost-effective. We argue for a set of changes to TB-IPC, including better coordination of policymaking, clinic decongestion, changes to clinic design and building regulations, and budgeting for enablers to sustain implementation of TB-IPC interventions. Additional research is needed to find the most effective means of improving the implementation of TB-IPC interventions; to develop approaches to screening for prevalent pulmonary tuberculosis that do not rely on symptoms; and to identify groups of patients that can be seen in clinic less frequently.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10369445PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.192DOI Listing

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