Publication
Title
Tuberculosis and AIDS stigma among patients who delay seeking care for tuberculosis symptoms
Author
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Delay in presentation to a health facility is an important concern for tuberculosis (TB) control. The effect of stigma on delay in seeking care for TB symptoms is not well studied, especially in the context of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) co-epidemic. OBJECTIVE: To estimate the association of TB and acquired immune-deficiency syndrome (AIDS) stigma on delay in seeking care for TB symptoms. METHODS: For 480 newly diagnosed patients with TB, time from first TB symptom to the first visit to a qualified provider was calculated. Stigma scales were administered to each patient to obtain a stigma score. RESULTS: Among men, those with higher TB stigma had a small increase in delay times, while women had a small decrease in delay. Among patients presenting with hemoptysis, higher TB stigma was associated with a small increase in delay, while among patients presenting with fever or extra-pulmonary symptoms only, higher TB and AIDS stigma resulted in shorter delay times. CONCLUSION: In a population with a relatively short median delay (26 days), the impact of TB and AIDS stigma translates into a minimal change in delay time. This suggests that stigma does not have a clinically relevant effect on TB patient delay in southern Thailand.
Language
English
Source (journal)
International journal of tuberculosis and lung disease. - Paris
Publication
Paris : 2010
ISSN
1027-3719
Volume/pages
14 :2 (2010) , p. 181-187
ISI
000274033300010
UAntwerpen
Publication type
Subject
External links
Web of Science
Record
Identifier
Creation 15.02.2018
Last edited 31.01.2023
To cite this reference