AI Article Synopsis

  • Anticipated, internal, and enacted stigma surrounding tuberculosis (TB) significantly hinders patient care and well-being, prompting the need for targeted interventions co-developed with TB-affected individuals and health workers in South Africa.
  • Utilizing community-based participatory research, discussions were held with 87 participants in Khayelitsha to identify stigma drivers and potential solutions, emphasizing the importance of lived experiences of TB survivors in crafting effective messaging.
  • Recommended intervention strategies included education and support at various levels, such as counselling at the individual level, support clubs at the interpersonal level, training for health workers, community awareness events, and school curricula integration to combat stigma.

Article Abstract

Background: Anticipated, internal, and enacted stigma are major barriers to TB care engagement, and directly impact patient well-being. Unfortunately, targeted stigma interventions are lacking. We aimed to co-develop a person-centred stigma intervention with TB-affected community members and health workers in South Africa.

Methods: Using a community-based participatory research approach, we conducted ten group discussions with people diagnosed with TB (past or present), caregivers, and health workers (total n=87) in Khayelitsha, Cape Town. Group discussions were facilitated by TB survivors. Discussion guides explored experiences and drivers of stigma and used human-centred design principles to co-develop solutions. Recordings were transcribed, coded, thematically analysed and then further interpreted using the socio-ecological model.

Results: Intervention components across socio-ecological levels shared common behaviour change strategies, namely education, empowerment, engagement, and innovation. At the individual level, participants recommended counselling to improve TB knowledge and provide ongoing support. TB survivors can guide messaging to nurture stigma resilience by highlighting that TB can affect anyone and is curable, and provide lived experiences of TB to decrease internal stigma. At the interpersonal level, support clubs and family-centred counselling were suggested to dispel TB-related myths and foster support. At the institutional level, health worker stigma reduction training informed by TB survivor perspectives was recommended. Consideration of how integration of TB/HIV care services may exacerbate TB/HIV intersectional stigma and ideas for restructured service delivery models were suggested to decrease anticipated and enacted stigma. At the community level, participants recommended awareness-raising events led by TB survivors, including TB information in school curricula. At the policy level, solutions focused on reducing the visibility generated by a TB diagnosis and resultant stigma in health facilities and shifting tasks to community health workers.

Conclusions: Decreasing TB stigma requires a multi-level approach. Co-developing a person-centred intervention with affected communities is feasible and generates stigma intervention components that are directed and implementable. Such community-informed intervention components should be prioritised by TB programs, including integrated TB/HIV care services.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10889064PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3921970/v1DOI Listing

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