Abstract

Background: According to the latest Guidelines from the World Health Organization, there is an increasing need for patient-centered tuberculosis disease management given the socio-economic factors influencing the tuberculosis epidemic. In the present study, we aimed to study TB in Barcelona city from an anthropological point of view and to devise a series of specific proposals to implement a patient-centered approach in our setting.Methods: We carried out a qualitative study using an anthropological approach in Barcelona in the period between November 2017 and November 2018 and proposed specific interventions based on our observations.Results: In practice, in our environment (a low-incidence European country where tuberculosis tends to present in patients with multiple social problems), and despite the goodwill of the care teams, there are no established and stable circuits, or specific tools to ensure that this is done routinely. Based on our observations, we have devised a series of specific proposals to implement a patient-centered approach. With these interventions we aim to (a) directly ameliorate TB patients well-being in any diagnostic/healthcare management center and (b) at more general level, to increase TB detection and treatment adherence.Conclusions: The patient-centered TB management recommended by the WHO might be essential for patients' well-being, but there is a lack of circuits or working protocols that ensure its implementation in a regulated manner. In the present manuscript we explain the various concrete measures that we propose in our region and which could be put into practice in other cities or geographic regions with similar epidemiological characteristics.

Highlights

  • According to the latest global report on tuberculosis (TB) published by the World Health Organization (WHO), there were up to 10 million cases of TB and 1.3 million TB-related deaths in 2017 [1]

  • Patient-Centered TB Care Interventions infected with HIV, and with the large-scale migration from countries with a high incidence of TB found in the early 2000s, TB is relatively well-controlled and is decreasing in incidence [2]

  • In the present manuscript we aimed to study TB in Barcelona city from an anthropological point of view and to devise a series of specific proposals to implement a patient-centered approach; applicable to our setting but which could be extrapolated to other cities with similar epidemiological situations

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Summary

Introduction

According to the latest global report on tuberculosis (TB) published by the World Health Organization (WHO), there were up to 10 million cases of TB and 1.3 million TB-related deaths in 2017 [1]. In the case of Barcelona, a model TB control program established by the city’s Public Health Agency, which allows an interchange of information between clinical TB units, case managers and public health nurses, as well as healthcare agents [4], thereby facilitating the active monitoring, detection and follow-up of patients and access to the complete data for all cases, has been operating for more than 30 years This has led Barcelona to be considered a laboratory in which the problems and challenges of TB control programs in Western Europe, especially in large cities, can be studied. In the latest report (with data from 2016), the incidence rate was 16.2/100,000 inhabitants, distributed unevenly in the various districts depending on their levels of income (up to 43.8/100,000 in the Ciutat Vella district, for example) About half of these patients were born outside Spain, the percentage of patients with socio-economic vulnerability was estimated at 7.3% and there was an increase in homelessness and alcoholism. We aimed to study TB in Barcelona city from an anthropological point of view and to devise a series of specific proposals to implement a patient-centered approach in our setting

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