Lost to Follow-Up among Tuberculosis Patients during the Public-Private Mix Era in Rural Area of Indonesia

Rahayu, Sri R. and Susilastuti, Mustika S. and Saefurrohim, Muhamad Z. and Azam, Mahalul and Indrawati, Fitri and Supriyono, Mamat and Miarso, Dani and Safitri, Baiq D. and Daniswara, Sabrina and Merzistya, Aufiena N.A. and Amilia, Rizqi and Affandi, Mustafa D. and Wahidah, Nur and Isbandi, Isbandi and Wandastuti, Anggun D. and Laila, Annisa K. and Muflikhah, Zuyyinatun (2023) Lost to Follow-Up among Tuberculosis Patients during the Public-Private Mix Era in Rural Area of Indonesia. Ethiopian journal of health sciences, 33 (1). pp. 115-122. ISSN 24137170

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Abstract

Background: Indonesia's national Tuberculosis (TB) strategy is public-private mix (PPM). The PPM aims to treat patients who have lost sight during TB treatment as these patients are TB carriers and at risk of transmitting TB. The purpose of this study was to identify predictive factors for loss to follow-up (LFTU) among TB patients receiving treatment when the PPM was at place in Indonesia. Methods: The design of this study was a retrospective cohort study. The data used in this study was sourced from the Tuberculosis Information System (SITB) of Semarang which was recorded routinely during 2020-2021. Univariate analysis, crosstabulation, and logistic regression were performed on 3434 TB patients meeting the minimum variables. Results: The participation of health facilities in reporting TB during the PPM era in Semarang reached 97.6 consisting of 37 primary healthcare center (100), 8 public hospitals (100), 19 private hospitals (90.5), and a community-based pulmonary health center (100). The regression analysis reveal that the predictive factors of LTFU-TB during the PPM are the year of diagnosis (AOR=1.541; p-value=<0.001; 95 CI=1.228-1.934), referral status (AOR=1.562, p-value=0.007; 95 CI=1.130-2160), healthcare and social security insurance ownership (AOR=1.638; p-value=<0.001; 95 CI=1.263-2.124), drugs source (AOR=4.667; p-value=0.035; 95 CI=1.117-19.489). Conclusions: The PPM strategy in dealing with LTFU patients should focus on TB patients without Healthcare and Social Security Insurance and who receive TB treatment rather than program drugs. © 2023 Sri Ratna R., et al.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: Cited by: 0
Uncontrolled Keywords: Delivery of Health Care; Humans; Indonesia; Lost to Follow-Up; Retrospective Studies; Tuberculosis; follow up; health care delivery; human; Indonesia; retrospective study; tuberculosis
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
Divisions: Faculty of Medicine, Public Health and Nursing > Public Health and Nutrition
Depositing User: Ngesti Gandini
Date Deposited: 22 May 2024 02:28
Last Modified: 22 May 2024 02:28
URI: https://ir.lib.ugm.ac.id/id/eprint/1320

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