Abstract

ABSTRACT South Africa is increasingly offering screening, diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis (TB), and especially drug-resistant TB, at the primary care level. Nosocomial transmission of TB within primary health facilities is a growing concern in South Africa, and globally. We explore here how TB infection prevention and control (IPC) policies, historically focused on hospitals, are being implemented within primary care facilities. We spoke to 15 policy actors using in-depth interviews about barriers to effective TB-IPC and opportunities for improving implementation. We identified four drivers of poor policy implementation: fragmentation of institutional responsibility and accountability for TB-IPC; struggles by TB-IPC advocates to frame TB-IPC as an urgent and addressable policy problem; barriers to policy innovation from both a lack of evidence as well as a policy environment dependent on ‘new’ evidence to justify new policy; and the impact of professional medical cultures on the accurate recognition of and response to TB risks. Participants also identified examples of TB-IPC innovation and described conditions necessary for these successes. TB-IPC is a long-standing, complex health systems challenge. As important as downstream practices like mask-wearing and ventilation are, sustained, effective TB-IPC ultimately requires that we better address the upstream barriers to TB-IPC policy formulation and implementation.

Highlights

  • Nosocomial transmission of tuberculosis (TB) is an urgent global public health problem (WHO, 2019a)

  • This study focuses on policy actor perspectives on the underlying drivers of TB-infection prevention and control (IPC) policy implementation

  • Many had direct experience of South African primary care TB services, and others were more involved in TB infection prevention and control (TB-IPC) research or global policy processes

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Summary

Introduction

Nosocomial transmission of tuberculosis (TB) is an urgent global public health problem (WHO, 2019a). Van Cutsem et al (2016) provide an excellent overview of some of the barriers to effective TBIPC These include lack of training, a disconnect between knowledge, attitudes and practices, lack of motivation and a sense of complacency, unclear or overly broad TB-IPC policies and procedures, insufficient resources and inadequate infrastructure, and patient flow and service delivery models that do not reduce – and in some cases, increase – nosocomial TB transmission risk. South Africa is increasingly offering screening, diagnosis and treatment of TB, especially drug-resistant (DR)-TB, at this level of care (Cox & Ford, 2013) and we were interested in how TB-IPC policies, historically focused on in-patient hospital settings, were being translated and implemented within primary care facilities

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