Engaging private providers and Ayurvedic practitioners in Bilaspur, India: did it increase TB case detection?
Authors
R Bhardwaj
National Health Mission, Shimla, Himachal Pradesh, India
J Oeltmann
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
C Ravichandra
National Tuberculosis Institute, Bengaluru, India
V Chadda
National Tuberculosis Institute, Bengaluru, India
M Das
Médecins Sans Frontières, Operational Centre Brussels, New Delhi, India
A Kumar
International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, South-East Asia Regional Office, New Delhi, India
Keywords:
private practitioners, Indian system of medicine, India, operational research
Abstract
To find ‘missing’ tuberculosis (TB) cases, in November 2014 we trained private practitioners (PPs) and Ayurvedic practitioners (APs; Indian system of medicine) in Bilaspur district, India, to identify patients with presumptive TB and refer them to sputum microscopy centres. To reinforce this training, we sent weekly text message reminders during January–March 2015. All 50 APs and 23 of 29 PPs participated. The number of patients with presumptive TB referred by the PPs and APs increased from 38 (January–March 2014) to 104 (January–March 2015), and the number of smear-positive TB patients diagnosed increased from 5 to 16, a 220% increase. While the intervention increased the number of referrals, it did not impact case detection at district level, due to the short duration of the intervention and the non-dominant private sector.
Keywords: private practitioners, Indian system of medicine, India, operational research
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