“You have to change your whole life”: A qualitative study of the dynamics of treatment adherence among adults with tuberculosis in the United Kingdom
“You have to change your whole life”: A qualitative study of the dynamics of treatment adherence among adults with tuberculosis in the United Kingdom
Maintaining adherence to treatment for tuberculosis (TB) is essential if the disease is to be eliminated. As part of formative research to develop an intervention to improve adherence, we documented the lived experiences of adults receiving anti-TB treatment (ATT) in three UK cities and examined how personal, social, and structural circumstances interacted to impact on individuals’ adherence to treatment. Using a topic guide that explored social circumstances and experiences of TB care, we conducted in-depth interviews with 18 adults (six women) who were being or had been treated for TB (patients) and four adults (all women) who were caring for a friend, relative, or partner being treated for TB (caregivers). We analysed transcripts using an adapted framework method that classified factors affecting adherence as personal, social, structural, health systems, or treatment-related. Eleven of 18 patients were born outside the UK (in South, Central, and East Asia, and Eastern and Southern Africa); among the seven who were UK-born, four were Black, Asian, or Minority Ethnic and three were White British. TB and its treatment were often disruptive: in addition to debilitating symptoms and side effects of ATT, participants faced job insecurity, unstable housing, stigma, social isolation, worsening mental health, and damaged relationships. Those who had a strong support network, stable employment, a routine that could easily be adapted, a trusting relationship with their TB team, and clear understanding of the need for treatment reported finding it easier to adhere to ATT. Changes in circumstances sometimes had dramatic effects on an individual's ability to take ATT; participants described how the impact of certain acute events (e.g., the onset of side effects or fatigue, episodes of stigmatisation, loss of income) were amplified by their timing or through their interaction with other elements of the individual's life. We suggest that the dynamic and fluctuating nature of these factors necessitates comprehensive and regular review of needs and potential problems, conducted before and during ATT; this, coupled with supportive measures that consider (and seek to mitigate) the influence of social and structural factors, may help improve adherence.
Compliance, Determinants, Elimination, Medication, Outcomes, Person-centred care
Karat, Aaron S.
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Jones, Annie S.K.
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Abubakar, Ibrahim
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Campbell, Colin N.J.
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Clarke, Amy L.
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Clarke, Caroline S.
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Darvell, Marcia
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Hill, Adam T.
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Horne, Robert
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Kunst, Heinke
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Mandelbaum, Mike
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Marshall, Ben G.
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McSparron, Ceri
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Rahman, Ananna
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Lipman, Marc C.I.
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Kielmann, Karina
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Karat, Aaron S.
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Campbell, Colin N.J.
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Clarke, Amy L.
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Clarke, Caroline S.
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Darvell, Marcia
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Hill, Adam T.
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Horne, Robert
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Kunst, Heinke
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Mandelbaum, Mike
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Marshall, Ben G.
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McSparron, Ceri
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Rahman, Ananna
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Stagg, Helen R.
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White, Jacqui
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Lipman, Marc C.I.
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Kielmann, Karina
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Karat, Aaron S., Jones, Annie S.K., Abubakar, Ibrahim, Campbell, Colin N.J., Clarke, Amy L., Clarke, Caroline S., Darvell, Marcia, Hill, Adam T., Horne, Robert, Kunst, Heinke, Mandelbaum, Mike, Marshall, Ben G., McSparron, Ceri, Rahman, Ananna, Stagg, Helen R., White, Jacqui, Lipman, Marc C.I. and Kielmann, Karina
(2021)
“You have to change your whole life”: A qualitative study of the dynamics of treatment adherence among adults with tuberculosis in the United Kingdom.
Journal of Clinical Tuberculosis and Other Mycobacterial Diseases, 23, [100233].
(doi:10.1016/j.jctube.2021.100233).
Abstract
Maintaining adherence to treatment for tuberculosis (TB) is essential if the disease is to be eliminated. As part of formative research to develop an intervention to improve adherence, we documented the lived experiences of adults receiving anti-TB treatment (ATT) in three UK cities and examined how personal, social, and structural circumstances interacted to impact on individuals’ adherence to treatment. Using a topic guide that explored social circumstances and experiences of TB care, we conducted in-depth interviews with 18 adults (six women) who were being or had been treated for TB (patients) and four adults (all women) who were caring for a friend, relative, or partner being treated for TB (caregivers). We analysed transcripts using an adapted framework method that classified factors affecting adherence as personal, social, structural, health systems, or treatment-related. Eleven of 18 patients were born outside the UK (in South, Central, and East Asia, and Eastern and Southern Africa); among the seven who were UK-born, four were Black, Asian, or Minority Ethnic and three were White British. TB and its treatment were often disruptive: in addition to debilitating symptoms and side effects of ATT, participants faced job insecurity, unstable housing, stigma, social isolation, worsening mental health, and damaged relationships. Those who had a strong support network, stable employment, a routine that could easily be adapted, a trusting relationship with their TB team, and clear understanding of the need for treatment reported finding it easier to adhere to ATT. Changes in circumstances sometimes had dramatic effects on an individual's ability to take ATT; participants described how the impact of certain acute events (e.g., the onset of side effects or fatigue, episodes of stigmatisation, loss of income) were amplified by their timing or through their interaction with other elements of the individual's life. We suggest that the dynamic and fluctuating nature of these factors necessitates comprehensive and regular review of needs and potential problems, conducted before and during ATT; this, coupled with supportive measures that consider (and seek to mitigate) the influence of social and structural factors, may help improve adherence.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 29 March 2021
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Funding Information:
This work was supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment Programme, UK grant number 16/88/06.
Keywords:
Compliance, Determinants, Elimination, Medication, Outcomes, Person-centred care
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Local EPrints ID: 450404
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/450404
PURE UUID: a15ff556-725d-4a20-9ad6-7cdbad6ff5b9
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Date deposited: 27 Jul 2021 17:24
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 12:47
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Contributors
Author:
Aaron S. Karat
Author:
Annie S.K. Jones
Author:
Ibrahim Abubakar
Author:
Colin N.J. Campbell
Author:
Amy L. Clarke
Author:
Caroline S. Clarke
Author:
Marcia Darvell
Author:
Adam T. Hill
Author:
Robert Horne
Author:
Heinke Kunst
Author:
Mike Mandelbaum
Author:
Ceri McSparron
Author:
Ananna Rahman
Author:
Helen R. Stagg
Author:
Jacqui White
Author:
Marc C.I. Lipman
Author:
Karina Kielmann
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