Abstract

Understanding factors leading to death following the onset of symptoms of tuberculosis (TB) is important to predict prognosis among patients with TB. With aiming the End TB strategy, mortality is declining not as expected globally and in India. Although India is one of the highest incidence countries globally, India lacks evidence of understanding of the factors for TB death. Thus, this study aims to document the characteristics of deaths due to TB in the Western state of India, Gujarat.About 74 deaths were randomly documented from 7 different geographic regions of Gujarat through a community-based death review from Oct 2021 to February 2022. The trained researchers administered a semi-structured questionnaire to capture the demographic, socioeconomic, history of comorbidity and addiction, medical history, case records, and chronology of events preceding death.Most deaths happened within 24 weeks from the onset of symptoms, which reduced to half (12 weeks) in the other cascades, i.e., diagnosis and treatment initiation to the death. Out of 74 reviewed deaths, 47 (64%) deaths had the cause of death as TB, with an average duration of 87 days from onset of symptoms to death. The study observed the time, place, and person distribution on different epidemiological parameters. While analyzing narratives from the relative, the gaps between the system (service provider) and demand (patient perspective) sides were synthesized.It is recommended to conduct such kind of community-based death reviews in the routine practices of the National TB Elimination Program to ensure the appropriate review of the underlying causes of deaths due to TB. The matrix developed in this study is easy to replicate in any other death reviews to understand the intercept of the supply-demand side determinants for the deaths.

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