Community health volunteers’ contribution to tuberculosis patients notified to National Tuberculosis program through contact investigation in Kenya

Abstract Background Contact investigation is important in finding contacts of people who have Tuberculosis (TB) disease so that they can be given treatment and stop further transmission. The main objective of this study was to assess the contribution of community health volunteers (CHVs) to the numb...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tabitha Abongo, Benson Ulo, Sarah Karanja
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-09271-7
_version_ 1819091606225027072
author Tabitha Abongo
Benson Ulo
Sarah Karanja
author_facet Tabitha Abongo
Benson Ulo
Sarah Karanja
author_sort Tabitha Abongo
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Contact investigation is important in finding contacts of people who have Tuberculosis (TB) disease so that they can be given treatment and stop further transmission. The main objective of this study was to assess the contribution of community health volunteers (CHVs) to the number of TB patients notified to the National program in Kenya through household contact screening and referral of persons with TB signs and symptoms to the facilities for further investigation. Methods This was a retrospective desk review of project reports submitted to Amref Health Africa in Kenya by the sub-recipients implementing activities in the 33 counties with Case Notification Rate (CNR) of less 175/100,000 and Treatment Success Rate (TRS) of less than 88% as per the National strategic plan 2015–2018. Data for this study covered a period between January and December 2016. Data on the notified TB patients was obtained from the National Tuberculosis Information Basic Unit (TIBU). The study population included all the TB index cases whose households were visited by CHVs for contact screening. Data was recorded into excel spreadsheets where the descriptive analysis was done, proportions calculated and summarized in a table. Results Community health volunteers visited a total of 26,307 TB patients (index cases) in their households for contact screening. A total of 44,617 household members were screened for TB with 43,012 (96.40%) from households of bacteriologically confirmed TB patients and 1606 (3.60%) from households of children under 5 years. The proportion of the persons referred to the number screened was 19.6% for those over 5 years and 21.9% from under 5 years with almost the same percentages for males and females at 19.2% and 19.7% respectively. The percentage of (TB) cases identified through tracing of contacts in these counties improved to 10% (5456) of the 54,913 cases notified to the National TB Program. Conclusions This study showed that in the 33 counties of Global Fund TB project implementation, the percentage of TB cases identified through tracing of contacts improved from 6 to 10% while the percentage of notified TB cases; all forms contributed through community referrals improved from 4 to 8%. Community health volunteers can play an effective role in household contact screening and referrals for the identification of TB.
first_indexed 2024-12-21T22:42:24Z
format Article
id doaj.art-4f475eac949940c3976b0cfd98ccd0f4
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1471-2458
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-21T22:42:24Z
publishDate 2020-07-01
publisher BMC
record_format Article
series BMC Public Health
spelling doaj.art-4f475eac949940c3976b0cfd98ccd0f42022-12-21T18:47:49ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582020-07-012011810.1186/s12889-020-09271-7Community health volunteers’ contribution to tuberculosis patients notified to National Tuberculosis program through contact investigation in KenyaTabitha Abongo0Benson Ulo1Sarah Karanja2Amref Health Africa in Kenya, Global Fund TB projectAmref Health Africa in Kenya, Global Fund TB projectAmref Health Africa in Kenya, Global Fund TB projectAbstract Background Contact investigation is important in finding contacts of people who have Tuberculosis (TB) disease so that they can be given treatment and stop further transmission. The main objective of this study was to assess the contribution of community health volunteers (CHVs) to the number of TB patients notified to the National program in Kenya through household contact screening and referral of persons with TB signs and symptoms to the facilities for further investigation. Methods This was a retrospective desk review of project reports submitted to Amref Health Africa in Kenya by the sub-recipients implementing activities in the 33 counties with Case Notification Rate (CNR) of less 175/100,000 and Treatment Success Rate (TRS) of less than 88% as per the National strategic plan 2015–2018. Data for this study covered a period between January and December 2016. Data on the notified TB patients was obtained from the National Tuberculosis Information Basic Unit (TIBU). The study population included all the TB index cases whose households were visited by CHVs for contact screening. Data was recorded into excel spreadsheets where the descriptive analysis was done, proportions calculated and summarized in a table. Results Community health volunteers visited a total of 26,307 TB patients (index cases) in their households for contact screening. A total of 44,617 household members were screened for TB with 43,012 (96.40%) from households of bacteriologically confirmed TB patients and 1606 (3.60%) from households of children under 5 years. The proportion of the persons referred to the number screened was 19.6% for those over 5 years and 21.9% from under 5 years with almost the same percentages for males and females at 19.2% and 19.7% respectively. The percentage of (TB) cases identified through tracing of contacts in these counties improved to 10% (5456) of the 54,913 cases notified to the National TB Program. Conclusions This study showed that in the 33 counties of Global Fund TB project implementation, the percentage of TB cases identified through tracing of contacts improved from 6 to 10% while the percentage of notified TB cases; all forms contributed through community referrals improved from 4 to 8%. Community health volunteers can play an effective role in household contact screening and referrals for the identification of TB.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-09271-7Contact screeningTuberculosisContact tracingCommunity health volunteersCommunity health workers
spellingShingle Tabitha Abongo
Benson Ulo
Sarah Karanja
Community health volunteers’ contribution to tuberculosis patients notified to National Tuberculosis program through contact investigation in Kenya
BMC Public Health
Contact screening
Tuberculosis
Contact tracing
Community health volunteers
Community health workers
title Community health volunteers’ contribution to tuberculosis patients notified to National Tuberculosis program through contact investigation in Kenya
title_full Community health volunteers’ contribution to tuberculosis patients notified to National Tuberculosis program through contact investigation in Kenya
title_fullStr Community health volunteers’ contribution to tuberculosis patients notified to National Tuberculosis program through contact investigation in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Community health volunteers’ contribution to tuberculosis patients notified to National Tuberculosis program through contact investigation in Kenya
title_short Community health volunteers’ contribution to tuberculosis patients notified to National Tuberculosis program through contact investigation in Kenya
title_sort community health volunteers contribution to tuberculosis patients notified to national tuberculosis program through contact investigation in kenya
topic Contact screening
Tuberculosis
Contact tracing
Community health volunteers
Community health workers
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-020-09271-7
work_keys_str_mv AT tabithaabongo communityhealthvolunteerscontributiontotuberculosispatientsnotifiedtonationaltuberculosisprogramthroughcontactinvestigationinkenya
AT bensonulo communityhealthvolunteerscontributiontotuberculosispatientsnotifiedtonationaltuberculosisprogramthroughcontactinvestigationinkenya
AT sarahkaranja communityhealthvolunteerscontributiontotuberculosispatientsnotifiedtonationaltuberculosisprogramthroughcontactinvestigationinkenya