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. 2024 Sep 10;24:1043. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-11451-9

Table 3.

Context, Barriers, Facilitators and Implementation Strategies for a Home-based Contact Investigation Intervention Amongst Health Extension Workers in Ethiopia

Overall Context

• Ethiopia remains a high TB burden country and has poor TPT coverage among children

• TB care and prevention services have largely been facility-based in Ethiopia

• Time, cost of transportation, lost wages, poor quality roads, and long distances to health facilities are significant barriers to families seeking TPT for their children

• The perception of medication as “treatment” in an otherwise healthy child is a significant barrier to uptake and completion of TPT

• Ethiopia has a cadre of healthcare workers, called health extension workers, that provide home-based and community-based services that aim to enhance access to health promotion, disease prevention and selective treatment services that have significantly contributed to reducing child mortality over the last 20 years

Home-based contact investigation

(includes contact tracing, TB evaluation, TPT initiation and TPT follow up)

Barriers and Facilitators Implementation Strategies Needed to support implementation

Facilitators

• Reduces caregiver burden (time, cost, etc.)

• Reduced waiting time and clinic congestion

• Home-based contact investigation will increase identification of household contacts

• Home-based programming elevates importance of TPT in individual households and in the community

• Reduced transmission of communicable illness in the health center (TB, COVID-19 etc.)

1. Task-sharing contact investigation and TPT management among HEW and TB focal person

2. Service integration to offset increased HEW workload

3. Community awareness campaigns to improve family-level acceptability of intervention and TPT

• Education on TB infection & TPT for HCWs, caregivers and community

• Training on intervention protocols and implementation to HEWs, TB focal persons, pharmacists, etc

• Supportive supervision of HEWs to ensure fidelity to intervention and maintenance of clinical sills

• HEW medical record for family folder

• Clinical support tools to assist with decision making

• Registration book

• Referral papers

• Portable scale

• Personal protective equipment

• Transport for HCWs

• Drug forecasting and ordering

Barriers

• Concern that necessary equipment for adequate contact investigation will not be available in the household

• HEWs lack transportation or adequate reimbursement to make home visits in rural areas

• HCWs lack transportation for supervising HEWs in community

• Overworked, understaffed health extension program

• Perceived poor motivation and commitment of HEWs

• Home-visits are potentially stigmatizing

• Increased access to TPT may result in drug stock outs