Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology (Jan 2023)

Time to change the way we think about tuberculosis infection prevention and control in health facilities: insights from recent research

  • Tom A. Yates,
  • Aaron S. Karat,
  • Fiammetta Bozzani,
  • Nicky McCreesh,
  • Hayley MacGregor,
  • Peter G. Beckwith,
  • Indira Govender,
  • Christopher J. Colvin,
  • Karina Kielmann,
  • Alison D. Grant

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/ash.2023.192
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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In clinical settings where airborne pathogens, such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis, are prevalent, they constitute an important threat to health workers and people accessing healthcare. We report key insights from a 3-year project conducted in primary healthcare clinics in South Africa, alongside other recent tuberculosis infection prevention and control (TB-IPC) research. We discuss the fragmentation of TB-IPC policies and budgets; the characteristics of individuals attending clinics with prevalent pulmonary tuberculosis; clinic congestion and patient flow; clinic design and natural ventilation; and the facility-level determinants of the implementation (or not) of TB-IPC interventions. We present modeling studies that describe the contribution of M. tuberculosis transmission in clinics to the community tuberculosis burden and economic evaluations showing that TB-IPC interventions are highly cost-effective. We argue for a set of changes to TB-IPC, including better coordination of policymaking, clinic decongestion, changes to clinic design and building regulations, and budgeting for enablers to sustain implementation of TB-IPC interventions. Additional research is needed to find the most effective means of improving the implementation of TB-IPC interventions; to develop approaches to screening for prevalent pulmonary tuberculosis that do not rely on symptoms; and to identify groups of patients that can be seen in clinic less frequently.