Bench, bed and beyond: Communication and responsibility in decentralised tuberculosis care

Background: South Africa faces one of the world’s worst drug-resistant tuberculosis epidemics. Implementing successful care in this context has proven challenging for a number of reasons. Communication is an essential yet neglected feature of care and research in the field of tuberculosis. Aim: The...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jennifer Watermeyer, Claire Penn, Megan Scott, Tshegofatso Seabi
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2019-09-01
Series:Health SA Gesondheid: Journal of Interdisciplinary Health Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hsag.co.za/index.php/hsag/article/view/1208
id doaj-25c548ac68614fc78df66183e23ba53d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-25c548ac68614fc78df66183e23ba53d2020-11-24T21:19:13ZafrAOSISHealth SA Gesondheid: Journal of Interdisciplinary Health Sciences1025-98482071-97362019-09-01240e1e810.4102/hsag.v24i0.1208761Bench, bed and beyond: Communication and responsibility in decentralised tuberculosis careJennifer Watermeyer0Claire Penn1Megan Scott2Tshegofatso Seabi3Health Communication Research Unit, School of Human and Community Development, University of the Witwatersrand, JohannesburgHealth Communication Research Unit, School of Human and Community Development, University of the Witwatersrand, JohannesburgHealth Communication Research Unit, School of Human and Community Development, University of the Witwatersrand, JohannesburgHealth Communication Research Unit, School of Human and Community Development, University of the Witwatersrand, JohannesburgBackground: South Africa faces one of the world’s worst drug-resistant tuberculosis epidemics. Implementing successful care in this context has proven challenging for a number of reasons. Communication is an essential yet neglected feature of care and research in the field of tuberculosis. Aim: The primary aim of this qualitative study was to explore communication facilitators and barriers at several tuberculosis care sites. In this article, we focus on communication practices across the chain of diagnosis, treatment, discharge and follow-up in decentralised care approaches and present evidence of gaps in communication. Setting: The study was conducted at three tuberculosis care sites in two South African provinces. Methods: Participants included healthcare workers, patients, community members and home-based carers. Data included 79 interviews, 4 video-recorded interactions between patients and healthcare workers, and ethnographic observations at each site. We analysed the data using thematic analysis and a qualitative sociolinguistic framework. Results: Communication in decentralised care contexts is complex because of multiple sites and role players. Responsibility for communication seems to be unduly placed on patients, treatment guidelines are not implemented consistently across sites and assumptions are made about the role of others in the chain. Patient and healthcare worker reports suggest confusion and frustration. Conclusion: Communication in the South African tuberculosis care context appears fragile and current mechanisms for detecting flaws in the care chain are not sensitive to communication issues. We make recommendations for strengthening home-based care resources, providing team training and focusing on communication processes in monitoring and evaluating systems.https://hsag.co.za/index.php/hsag/article/view/1208CommunicationResponsibilityTuberculosisQualitative ResearchDecentralised Care
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer Watermeyer
Claire Penn
Megan Scott
Tshegofatso Seabi
spellingShingle Jennifer Watermeyer
Claire Penn
Megan Scott
Tshegofatso Seabi
Bench, bed and beyond: Communication and responsibility in decentralised tuberculosis care
Health SA Gesondheid: Journal of Interdisciplinary Health Sciences
Communication
Responsibility
Tuberculosis
Qualitative Research
Decentralised Care
author_facet Jennifer Watermeyer
Claire Penn
Megan Scott
Tshegofatso Seabi
author_sort Jennifer Watermeyer
title Bench, bed and beyond: Communication and responsibility in decentralised tuberculosis care
title_short Bench, bed and beyond: Communication and responsibility in decentralised tuberculosis care
title_full Bench, bed and beyond: Communication and responsibility in decentralised tuberculosis care
title_fullStr Bench, bed and beyond: Communication and responsibility in decentralised tuberculosis care
title_full_unstemmed Bench, bed and beyond: Communication and responsibility in decentralised tuberculosis care
title_sort bench, bed and beyond: communication and responsibility in decentralised tuberculosis care
publisher AOSIS
series Health SA Gesondheid: Journal of Interdisciplinary Health Sciences
issn 1025-9848
2071-9736
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Background: South Africa faces one of the world’s worst drug-resistant tuberculosis epidemics. Implementing successful care in this context has proven challenging for a number of reasons. Communication is an essential yet neglected feature of care and research in the field of tuberculosis. Aim: The primary aim of this qualitative study was to explore communication facilitators and barriers at several tuberculosis care sites. In this article, we focus on communication practices across the chain of diagnosis, treatment, discharge and follow-up in decentralised care approaches and present evidence of gaps in communication. Setting: The study was conducted at three tuberculosis care sites in two South African provinces. Methods: Participants included healthcare workers, patients, community members and home-based carers. Data included 79 interviews, 4 video-recorded interactions between patients and healthcare workers, and ethnographic observations at each site. We analysed the data using thematic analysis and a qualitative sociolinguistic framework. Results: Communication in decentralised care contexts is complex because of multiple sites and role players. Responsibility for communication seems to be unduly placed on patients, treatment guidelines are not implemented consistently across sites and assumptions are made about the role of others in the chain. Patient and healthcare worker reports suggest confusion and frustration. Conclusion: Communication in the South African tuberculosis care context appears fragile and current mechanisms for detecting flaws in the care chain are not sensitive to communication issues. We make recommendations for strengthening home-based care resources, providing team training and focusing on communication processes in monitoring and evaluating systems.
topic Communication
Responsibility
Tuberculosis
Qualitative Research
Decentralised Care
url https://hsag.co.za/index.php/hsag/article/view/1208
work_keys_str_mv AT jenniferwatermeyer benchbedandbeyondcommunicationandresponsibilityindecentralisedtuberculosiscare
AT clairepenn benchbedandbeyondcommunicationandresponsibilityindecentralisedtuberculosiscare
AT meganscott benchbedandbeyondcommunicationandresponsibilityindecentralisedtuberculosiscare
AT tshegofatsoseabi benchbedandbeyondcommunicationandresponsibilityindecentralisedtuberculosiscare
_version_ 1726006445350060032