Abstract

BackgroundThe role of governance in strengthening tuberculosis (TB) control has received little research attention. This review provides evidence of how institutional designs and organisational practices influence implementation of the national TB control programme (NTP) in Nigeria.Main textWe conducted a scoping review using a five-stage framework to review published and grey literature in English, on implementation of Nigeria’s NTP and identified themes related to governance using a health system governance framework. We included articles, of all study designs and methods, which described or analysed the processes of implementing TB control based on relevance to the research question.The review shows a dearth of studies which examined the role of governance in TB control in Nigeria. Although costed plans and policy coordination framework exist, public spending on TB control is low. While stakeholders’ involvement in TB control is increasing, institutional capacity is limited, especially in the private sector. TB-specific legislation is absent. Deployment and transfer of staff to the NTP are not transparent. Health workers are not transparent in communicating service entitlements to users. Despite existence of supportive policies, integration of TB control into the community and general health services have been weak. Willingness to pay for TB services is high, however, transaction cost and stigma among patients limit equity. Effectiveness and efficiency of the NTP was hindered by inadequate human resources, dilapidated service delivery infrastructure and weak drug supply system. Despite adhering to standardized recording and reporting format, regular monitoring and evaluation, revision of reporting formats, and electronic data management system, TB surveillance system was found to be weak. Delay in TB diagnosis and initiation of care, poor staff attitude to patients, lack of privacy, poor management of drug reactions and absence of infection control measures breach ethical standards for TB care.ConclusionsThis scoping review of governance of TB control in Nigeria highlights two main issues. Governance for strengthening TB control programmes in low-resource, high TB burden settings like Nigeria, is imperative. Secondly, there is a need for empirical studies involving detailed analysis of different dimensions of governance of TB control.

Highlights

  • We conducted a scoping review using a five-stage framework to review published and grey literature in English, on implementation of Nigeria’s national TB control programme (NTP) and identified themes related to governance using a health system governance framework

  • Other factors associated with high TB burden in Nigeria are high proportion of patients with drug-resistant TB estimated at 4.3% among new cases and 25% among previously-treated cases [1]; and weak health systems that are unable to support efficient scale-up of TB services [3]

  • This study fills a significant gap in knowledge about the role and importance of governance in TB control in Nigeria

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Summary

Introduction

We conducted a scoping review using a five-stage framework to review published and grey literature in English, on implementation of Nigeria’s NTP and identified themes related to governance using a health system governance framework. Despite existence of supportive policies, integration of TB control into the community and general health services have been weak. The role of governance in strengthening tuberculosis (TB) control has received little research attention. Tuberculosis remains a major health problem in many low and middle-income countries (LMICs) including Nigeria, a country among the 30 high TB burden countries and one of the top three of ten countries that accounted for 80% of the total gap between TB incidence and reported cases in 2017 [1]. Other factors associated with high TB burden in Nigeria are high proportion of patients with drug-resistant TB estimated at 4.3% among new cases and 25% among previously-treated cases [1]; and weak health systems that are unable to support efficient scale-up of TB services [3]

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