Emerging Infectious Diseases (Mar 2021)

Decentralized Care for Rifampin-Resistant Tuberculosis, Western Cape, South Africa

  • Sarah V. Leavitt,
  • Karen R. Jacobson,
  • Elizabeth J. Ragan,
  • Jacob Bor,
  • Jennifer Hughes,
  • Tara C. Bouton,
  • Tania Dolby,
  • Robin M. Warren,
  • Helen E. Jenkins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2703.203204
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 3
pp. 728 – 739

Abstract

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In 2011, South Africa implemented a policy to decentralize treatment for rifampin-resistant tuberculosis (TB) to reduce durations of hospitalization and enable local treatment. We assessed policy implementation in Western Cape Province, where services expanded from 6 specialized TB hospitals to 406 facilities, by analyzing National Health Laboratory Service data on TB during 2012–2015. We calculated the percentage of patients who visited a TB hospital <1 year after rifampin-resistant TB diagnosis, the median duration of their hospitalizations, and the total distance between facilities visited. We assessed temporal changes with linear regression and stratified results by location. Of 2,878 patients, 65% were from Cape Town. In Cape Town, 29% visited a TB hospital; elsewhere, 68% visited a TB hospital. We found that hospitalizations and travel distances were shorter in Cape Town than in the surrounding areas.

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