The global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis: A thematic scoping review, 2020-2023.
<h4>Background</h4>This thematic scoping review of publications sought to understand the global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis (TB), interpret the scope of resonating themes, and offer policy recommendations to stimulate TB recovery and future pandemic preparedness.<h4>Data sou...
| الحاوية / القاعدة: | PLOS Global Public Health |
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| المؤلفون الرئيسيون: | , , |
| التنسيق: | مقال |
| اللغة: | الإنجليزية |
| منشور في: |
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
2024-01-01
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| الوصول للمادة أونلاين: | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0003043 |
| _version_ | 1849920569283182592 |
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| author | Michael H Marco Sevim Ahmedov Kenneth G Castro |
| author_facet | Michael H Marco Sevim Ahmedov Kenneth G Castro |
| author_sort | Michael H Marco |
| collection | DOAJ |
| container_title | PLOS Global Public Health |
| description | <h4>Background</h4>This thematic scoping review of publications sought to understand the global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis (TB), interpret the scope of resonating themes, and offer policy recommendations to stimulate TB recovery and future pandemic preparedness.<h4>Data sources</h4>Publications were captured from three search engines, PubMed, EBSCO, and Google Scholar, and applicable websites written in English from January 1, 2020, to April 30, 2023.<h4>Study selection</h4>Our scoping review was limited to publications detailing the impact of COVID-19 on TB. Original research, reviews, letters, and editorials describing the deleterious and harmful--yet sometimes positive--impact of COVID-19 (sole exposure) on TB (sole outcome) were included. The objective was to methodically categorize the impacts into themes through a comprehensive review of selected studies to provide significant health policy guidance.<h4>Data extraction</h4>Two authors independently screened citations and full texts, while the third arbitrated when consensus was not met. All three performed data extraction.<h4>Data synthesis/results</h4>Of 1,755 screened publications, 176 (10%) covering 39 countries over 41 months met the inclusion criteria. By independently using a data extraction instrument, the three authors identified ten principal themes from each publication. These themes were later finalized through a consensus decision. The themes encompassed TB's care cascade, patient-centered care, psychosocial issues, and health services: 1) case-finding and notification (n = 45; 26%); 2) diagnosis and laboratory systems (n = 19; 10.7%) 3) prevention, treatment, and care (n = 22; 12.2%); 4) telemedicine/telehealth (n = 12; 6.8%); 5) social determinants of health (n = 14; 8%); 6) airborne infection prevention and control (n = 8; 4.6%); 7) health system strengthening (n = 22; 13%); 8) mental health (n = 13; 7.4%); 9) stigma (n = 11; 6.3%); and 10) health education (n = 10; 5.7%).<h4>Limitations</h4>Heterogeneity of publications within themes.<h4>Conclusions</h4>We identified ten globally generalizable themes of COVID-19's impact on TB. The impact and lessons learned from the themed analysis propelled us to draft public health policy recommendations to direct evidence-informed guidance that strengthens comprehensive global responses, recovery for TB, and future airborne pandemic preparedness. |
| format | Article |
| id | doaj-art-8bfab039cc264d0bb2cb49d0647a5fc9 |
| institution | Directory of Open Access Journals |
| issn | 2767-3375 |
| language | English |
| publishDate | 2024-01-01 |
| publisher | Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
| record_format | Article |
| spelling | doaj-art-8bfab039cc264d0bb2cb49d0647a5fc92025-08-20T00:56:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLOS Global Public Health2767-33752024-01-0147e000304310.1371/journal.pgph.0003043The global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis: A thematic scoping review, 2020-2023.Michael H MarcoSevim AhmedovKenneth G Castro<h4>Background</h4>This thematic scoping review of publications sought to understand the global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis (TB), interpret the scope of resonating themes, and offer policy recommendations to stimulate TB recovery and future pandemic preparedness.<h4>Data sources</h4>Publications were captured from three search engines, PubMed, EBSCO, and Google Scholar, and applicable websites written in English from January 1, 2020, to April 30, 2023.<h4>Study selection</h4>Our scoping review was limited to publications detailing the impact of COVID-19 on TB. Original research, reviews, letters, and editorials describing the deleterious and harmful--yet sometimes positive--impact of COVID-19 (sole exposure) on TB (sole outcome) were included. The objective was to methodically categorize the impacts into themes through a comprehensive review of selected studies to provide significant health policy guidance.<h4>Data extraction</h4>Two authors independently screened citations and full texts, while the third arbitrated when consensus was not met. All three performed data extraction.<h4>Data synthesis/results</h4>Of 1,755 screened publications, 176 (10%) covering 39 countries over 41 months met the inclusion criteria. By independently using a data extraction instrument, the three authors identified ten principal themes from each publication. These themes were later finalized through a consensus decision. The themes encompassed TB's care cascade, patient-centered care, psychosocial issues, and health services: 1) case-finding and notification (n = 45; 26%); 2) diagnosis and laboratory systems (n = 19; 10.7%) 3) prevention, treatment, and care (n = 22; 12.2%); 4) telemedicine/telehealth (n = 12; 6.8%); 5) social determinants of health (n = 14; 8%); 6) airborne infection prevention and control (n = 8; 4.6%); 7) health system strengthening (n = 22; 13%); 8) mental health (n = 13; 7.4%); 9) stigma (n = 11; 6.3%); and 10) health education (n = 10; 5.7%).<h4>Limitations</h4>Heterogeneity of publications within themes.<h4>Conclusions</h4>We identified ten globally generalizable themes of COVID-19's impact on TB. The impact and lessons learned from the themed analysis propelled us to draft public health policy recommendations to direct evidence-informed guidance that strengthens comprehensive global responses, recovery for TB, and future airborne pandemic preparedness.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0003043 |
| spellingShingle | Michael H Marco Sevim Ahmedov Kenneth G Castro The global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis: A thematic scoping review, 2020-2023. |
| title | The global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis: A thematic scoping review, 2020-2023. |
| title_full | The global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis: A thematic scoping review, 2020-2023. |
| title_fullStr | The global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis: A thematic scoping review, 2020-2023. |
| title_full_unstemmed | The global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis: A thematic scoping review, 2020-2023. |
| title_short | The global impact of COVID-19 on tuberculosis: A thematic scoping review, 2020-2023. |
| title_sort | global impact of covid 19 on tuberculosis a thematic scoping review 2020 2023 |
| url | https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0003043 |
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