Abstract

In high tuberculosis (TB) burden countries, health settings, including non-designated TB hospitals, host many patients with pulmonary TB. Bangladesh's National TB Control Program aims to strengthen TB infection prevention and control (IPC) in health settings. However, there has been no published literature to date that assessed the preparedness of hospitals to comply with the recommendations. To address this gap, our study examined healthcare workers knowledge and attitudes towards TB IPC guidelines and their perceptions regarding the hospitals' preparedness in Bangladesh. Between January to December 2019, we conducted 16 key-informant interviews and four focus group discussions with healthcare workers from two public tertiary care hospitals. In addition, we undertook a review of 13 documents [i.e., hospital policy, annual report, staff list, published manuscript]. Our findings showed that healthcare workers acknowledged the TB risk and were willing to implement the TB IPC measures but identified key barriers impacting implementation. Gaps were identified in: policy (no TB policy or guidelines in the hospital), health systems (healthcare workers were unaware of the guidelines, lack of TB IPC program, training and education, absence of healthcare-associated TB infection surveillance, low priority of TB IPC, no TB IPC monitoring and feedback, high patient load and bed occupancy, and limited supply of IPC resources) and behavioural factors (risk perception, compliance, and self and social stigma). The additional service-level gap was the lack of electronic medical record systems. These findings highlighted that while there is a demand amongst healthcare workers to implement TB IPC measures, the public tertiary care hospitals have got key issues to address. Therefore, the National TB Control Program may consider these gaps, provide TB IPC guidelines to these hospitals, assist them in developing hospital-level IPC manual, provide training, and coordinate with the ministry of health to allocate separate budget, staffing, and IPC resources to implement the control measures successfully.

Highlights

  • Healthcare workers (HCW) and other hospital occupants are at increased risk of tuberculosis (TB) infection in high TB burden countries [1]

  • The field team approached 18 HCWs for key-informant interviews (KII) and 38 HCWs for focus group discussions (FGD), where 16 HCW consented to participate as key informants and 35 consented as FGD participants

  • The key-informants had an average of 20.6 years (SD:10.8) of work experience, and the FGD participants had an average of 6.8 years (SD:6.3) of work experience in public tertiary care hospitals

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Summary

Introduction

Healthcare workers (HCW) and other hospital occupants are at increased risk of tuberculosis (TB) infection in high TB burden countries [1]. In Bangladesh, TB specialized hospitals admit and treat patients with drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB as inpatients. Prior studies show that TB specialized hospitals implement TB IPC guidelines regularly [2]. Tertiary care general hospitals admit presumptive TB patients for diagnosis and occasionally provide treatment to TB patients with comorbidities. Prior studies that pulmonary TB patients stay on average 5.5 days. There was the minimal implementation of TB IPC measures in public tertiary care general hospitals [3]. Pulmonary TB patients in inpatients wards with limited or no IPC measures have been shown to increase HCW exposure to TB, resulting in 42% of latent TB infections among HCW [4]

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