Abstract

Background: Tuberculosis (TB) is a major global public health problem and one of the leading causes of death among infectious diseases. Although TB can be cured with first-line antibiotics treatment of 6 months regimen, non-adherence to the treatment remains the main challenge for TB prevention and control. Interventions to promote adherence need to address multiple underlying factors linked to non-adherence, which requires a synthesis of studies to understand these factors in the local context. Our review accordingly examines these factors for TB treatment in Ethiopia. Methods: Articles were searched from PubMed and ScienceDirect databases, as well as manual searches through Google and Google Scholar search engines. Both quantitative and qualitative studies that showed factors associated with or reasons for non-adherence, default or loss to follow up from TB treatment were included. A total of 276 articles were screened, and 29 articles were ultimately included in the review. Findings: The extracted factors were synthesized thematically into seven dimensions of patient-centred, social, economic, health system, therapy, lifestyle, and geographic access factors. More than 20 distinct factors were identified under these headings. Some of these factors may also apply quite widely in other settings, with greater or lesser influence, but some are particularly applicable to the Ethiopian setting. Conclusion: Helping patients to achieve full adherence to TB medication is a complex problem as it is influenced by interplay between many factors. Healthcare managers, providers, and researchers need to consider and address multiple underlying factors when designing adherence interventions. This work provides a reference set of such factors for Ethiopian interventions.

Highlights

  • Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease that is one of the major causes of death, being in the top ten causes of death worldwide and the leading cause of death from infectious disease, ranking above HIV/AIDS in 2018

  • TB can be cured with first-line antibiotics treatment of 6 months regimen, non-adherence is the main challenge for TB control and prevention programs

  • Search expressions were developed for TB medication adherence or loss to follow up or default from TB treatment that were published in the English language with no publication date restriction

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Summary

Introduction

Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease that is one of the major causes of death, being in the top ten causes of death worldwide and the leading cause of death from infectious disease, ranking above HIV/AIDS in 2018. One-fourth of the population is either infected with TB or at risk of developing the disease, with an estimated 10 million people infected with TB worldwide in 2018 [1]. TB can be cured with first-line antibiotics treatment of 6 months regimen, non-adherence is the main challenge for TB control and prevention programs. Tuberculosis (TB) is a major global public health problem and one of the leading causes of death among infectious diseases. TB can be cured with first-line antibiotics treatment of 6 months regimen, non-adherence to the treatment remains the main challenge for TB prevention and control. Our review examines these factors for TB treatment in Ethiopia

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