Factors Associated with Treatment Failure among Smear Positive TB Patients in Khorasan-e-Razavi and Sistan-Baluchistan Provinces, Iran
Author(s) -
Hekmatollah Khoubfekr
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of microbiology and infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2146-9369
pISSN - 2146-3158
DOI - 10.5799/jmid.328927
Subject(s) - medicine , sputum , tuberculosis , functional illiteracy , logistic regression , multi drug resistant tuberculosis , health care , drug resistant tuberculosis , medical record , family medicine , environmental health , mycobacterium tuberculosis , pathology , political science , law , economics , economic growth
Tuberculosis (TB) treatment failure is one of the major problems of the health sector in developing countries. Poor treatment of patients leads to drug resistance, relapse, death, and ultimately prevents TB control programs. This study was conducted to determine the factors affecting tuberculosis treatment failure in Khorasan and SistanBalochistan regions which have a high prevalence of TB. Methods: In this case control study 270 patients with tuberculosis (90 cases, 180 controls) were analyzed. New TB patients registered with failure to treatment according to the national protocol between March 2008 March 2012 were chosen as cases and new TB patients with negative sputum smear in the same time frame were enrolled as control group. Demographic data and clinical treatment outcomes were collected through interviews and file records. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to determine the predictors of treatment failure in SPSS 19. Results: Independent factors and predictors of failure treatment included illiteracy, a three plus positive sputum smear, positive sputum smear at end of the second month, non-implementation of the Directly Observed Treatment Short strategy by healthcare staff, history of addiction and history of diabetes. Conclusion: Intervention programs for early detection and control of diabetes, drug control programs, giving priority to providing DOTS by health care workers, more individual care and attention to patients with initial smear p + 3 or those that remain sputum positive at the end of the second month or those who are less educated is necessary. J Microbiol Infect Dis 2016;6(4): 172-178
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