AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the financial impact of tuberculosis (TB) combined with diabetes (TB-DM) on patients and their households in the Philippines, a country with high TB rates and diabetes prevalence.
  • Data was collected over multiple points during treatment, looking at costs, income, and coping strategies among affected households in Negros Occidental and Cebu.
  • Results showed that while TB-DM patients required more frequent medical visits, both TB-DM and TB-only patients faced similar rates of catastrophic costs, indicating that having diabetes does not significantly increase the financial burden from TB.*

Article Abstract

Objective: Diabetes is a risk factor for TB mortality and relapse. The Philippines has a high TB incidence with co-morbid diabetes. This study assessed the pre- and post-TB diagnosis costs incurred by people with TB and diabetes (TB-DM) and their households in the Philippines.

Methods: Longitudinal data was collected for costs, income, and coping mechanisms of TB-affected households in Negros Occidental and Cebu, the Philippines. Data collection was conducted four times during TB treatment. The data collection tools were developed by adapting WHO's cross-sectional questionnaire in the Tuberculosis Patient Cost Surveys: A Handbook into a longitudinal study design. Demographic and clinical characteristics, self-reported household income, number of facility visits, patient costs, the proportion of TB-affected households facing catastrophic costs due to TB (>20% of annual household income before TB), coping mechanisms, and social support received were compared by diabetes status at the time of TB diagnosis.

Results: 530 people with TB were enrolled in this study, and 144 (27.2%) had TB-DM based on diabetes testing at the time of TB diagnosis. 75.4% of people with TB-DM were more than 45 years old compared to 50.3% of people with TB-only (p<0.001). People with TB-DM had more frequent visits for TB treatment (120 vs 87 visits, p = 0.054) as well as for total visits for TB-DM treatment (129 vs 88 visits, p = 0.010) compared to those with TB-only. There was no significant difference in the proportion of TB-affected households facing catastrophic costs between those with TB-DM (76.3%) and those with TB-only (68.7%, p = 0.691).

Conclusion: People with TB-DM in the Philippines face extensive health service use. However, this does not translate into substantial differences in the incidence of catastrophic cost. Further study is required to understand the incidence of catastrophic costs due to diabetes-only in the Philippines.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10810501PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0297342PLOS

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