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Improving infectious TB education for foreign-born patients and family members
Author(s) -
Nancy Bedingfield,
Bonnie Lashewicz,
Dina Fisher,
Kathryn KingShier
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
health education journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.421
H-Index - 34
eISSN - 1748-8176
pISSN - 0017-8969
DOI - 10.1177/00178969211061522
Subject(s) - feeling , medicine , family medicine , cognitive dissonance , isolation (microbiology) , nursing , psychology , social psychology , microbiology and biotechnology , biology
Objective: In low tuberculosis (TB) incidence countries, linguistic and cultural dissonance between families experiencing infectious TB and TB health care providers is a barrier to effective communication and successful treatment. The purpose of this research was to explore infectious TB education and counselling from the perspective of patients and family members who are foreign-born.Design/Setting: One component of a multiphase, qualitative case study conducted in Calgary, a large city in western Canada.Method: Data were collected through semi-structured interviews, chart review and field notes and analysed thematically. Eight families were represented in the 6 patient and 13 family member participants who had recently experienced infectious TB.Results: Three themes were generated from the data: ‘learning about TB from many sources’, ‘reassurance and connection’ and ‘missing information’. Participants described learning about TB in different ways, feeling reassured once they knew more and sharing information with others. Overall, participants expressed satisfaction with education and counselling received. However, there were indications that communication problems had occurred. Participants asked questions during the interview, described areas of lingering confusion and shared TB-related behaviours incongruent with medical understanding. Knowledge gaps often increased isolation.Conclusion: Gaps in infectious TB education and counselling have negative impacts on patient and family member well-being. Education and counselling can be improved using multiple modes of communication, proactively addressing common misperceptions and reducing barriers to patient participation. Improvements could empower families to better manage their own experience and share accurate TB information with their communities.

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