Abstract

Ukraine is among the top 20 highest drug-resistant tuberculosis burden countries in the world. Driving the high drug-resistant tuberculosis rates is an unchecked treatment default rate. This evaluation measures the effect of social support provided to tuberculosis patients at risk of defaulting on treatment during outpatient treatment. Five tuberculosis patient cohorts, served in three oblasts from 2011 and 2012, were constructed from medical records to compare risk factors for default, receipt of social services, and treatment outcome. Regression analyses were used to identify risk factors predictive of treatment default and to estimate the impact of the social support program on treatment default, controlling for risk, disease status, and demographics. In 2012, tuberculosis patients receiving social support in Ukraine reduced their probability of defaulting on continuation treatment by 10 percentage points compared to high-risk patients who did not receive social support in 2012 or 2011. Treatment success rates for the high-risk patients receiving social support were comparable to the low-risk cohorts and significantly improved over the high-risk comparison cohorts. Further research is recommended to quantify the costs and benefits for scaling-up social support services, evaluate social support program fidelity, identify which populations respond best to select services, and what barriers might still exist to achieve better adherence. With that information, tailoring programs to most effectively reach and serve clients in a patient-centered approach may reap substantial rewards for Ukraine.

Highlights

  • In 2012, TB patients receiving social support provided by Ukraine Red Cross Society (URCS) in Ukraine reduced their probability of defaulting on continuation treatment by 10 percentage points compared to high-risk patients who did not receive social support in 2012 or 2011

  • This study demonstrates the positive impact of providing social support to those at-risk for treatment default

  • Further research is recommended to differentiate the costs and benefits from home-based directly observed therapy short-course (DOTS) versus additional services offered through social support programs

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Summary

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB) remains a global threat with an estimated 1.8 million deaths in 2015; approximately 14 percent attributed to multi-drug resistant (MDR-TB) and rifampicin. Impact of support services on TB treatment default. Age 18–29 years 30–39 years 40–49 years 50–59 years 60 and older Missing Employment Employed Unemployed Retired/Disabled Other Missing Residence Rural Urban Missing Oblast Dnipropetrovsk Kharkiv Odessa Total Patients.

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