New strategies for an old disease: the social barriers to targeted testing and treatment of latent tuberculosis infection Público
Tatum, Katharine (Spring 2021)
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) is a bacterial infection that primarily affects the lungs and can be deadly if untreated. Although TB rates have significantly declined in the U.S., rates of decline have stalled. The primary driver of continued TB cases in the U.S. is due to longstanding, untreated latent tuberculosis infection (LTBI) among non-U.S.—born persons who have immigrated to the U.S. In response to these trends, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Division of Tuberculosis Elimination has updated its TB elimination strategic plan to include targeted testing and treatment of LTBI among non-U.S.—born populations, in addition to traditional monitoring and treatment of active disease. This dissertation provides an in-depth analysis of the social barriers to targeted testing and treatment of LTBI from two key perspectives: non-U.S.—born persons at-risk for LTBI and healthcare providers working in community health clinics (CHCs) who serve a large proportion of non-U.S.—born persons. Each chapter addresses one of the new TB elimination strategies: the focus on LTBI (Chapter 1), the focus on non-U.S.—born persons (Chapter 2), and the focus on shifting LTBI care to primary care settings (Chapter 3). The first chapter shows that participants disagree on how to classify LTBI, with some participants defining it as an illness state (infected with TB germs) and others defining it as a healthy state (not sick). These conflicting definitions lead to conflicting views on appropriate health behavior for someone diagnosed with LTBI. The second chapter shows that messages describing a link between country of birth and TB risk may be met with defensive responses, including challenging the logic of the link, or seeing oneself as exempt from risk messages because of TB tests taken for immigration. The third chapter shows that community health clinic staff still perceive the health department as the expert on LTBI, but see a benefit in keeping LTBI care in a patient’s medical home. Using sociological theories and frameworks, these papers identify key barriers that emerge in response to these shifting strategies while also highlighting fruitful areas for future interventions that can target these barriers.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
INTRODUCTION .......................................................................................................................... 1
References ..................................................................................................................................... 14
Tables and Figures ........................................................................................................................ 23
CHAPTER 1: Do I have it or not? Latent tuberculosis infection and the consequences of liminal health categories............................................................................................................................ 25
References ..................................................................................................................................... 55
Tables and Figures ........................................................................................................................ 60
CHAPTER 2: Why does it matter where I am born? Defensive processing of health risk messages: The case of TB risk among immigrants ....................................................................... 67
References ..................................................................................................................................... 97
Tables and Figures ...................................................................................................................... 102
CHAPTER 3: To refer or not to refer: Primary care perceptions on shifting professional boundaries in tuberculosis prevention and care .......................................................................... 107
References ................................................................................................................................... 136
Tables and Figures ...................................................................................................................... 143
CONCLUSION ........................................................................................................................... 147
References ................................................................................................................................... 158
EXPLANATION OF ROLE IN COLLABORATIVE STUDIES .............................................. 159
Message testing project (CH. 1 and CH. 2) ................................................................................ 159
Community health clinic project (CH. 3) ................................................................................... 160
METHODOLOGICAL APPENDIX .......................................................................................... 161
Message testing moderator guide ................................................................................................ 161
List of messages tested................................................................................................................ 176
Photos of message testing facilities ............................................................................................ 179
Example fieldnotes...................................................................................................................... 182
Message testing codebook .......................................................................................................... 183
Visualization of message testing codebook modification ........................................................... 189
Example message testing structured search and analytical memo .............................................. 190
Example message testing structured searches of linguistic phrases ........................................... 192
Example message testing analytical matrix ................................................................................ 194
Medical uncertainty theoretical diagram .................................................................................... 196
Defensive processing framework ................................................................................................ 197
Defensive processing theoretical diagram .................................................................................. 198
Community health clinic staff interview guide (providers) ........................................................ 199
Visualization of interview schedule ............................................................................................ 204
Health department codebook ...................................................................................................... 205
Example health department analytical matrix............................................................................. 211
Tables and figures table of contents
INTRODUCTION. TABLES AND FIGURES
Figure 1. Reported TB Cases in the U.S. ...................................................................................... 23
Figure 2. Reported TB Cases by U.S.—born and non-U.S.—born .............................................. 24
CHAPTER 1. TABLES AND FIGURES
Figure 1. Conceptualizing health categories ................................................................................. 60
Table 1. Sample design ................................................................................................................. 61
Table 2. Group demographics ....................................................................................................... 62
Figure 2. Prior knowledge and experience with LTBI ................................................................. 63
Figure 3. Health and illness frameworks ...................................................................................... 64
Figure 4. LTBI as illness category ................................................................................................ 65
Figure 5. LTBI as healthy category .............................................................................................. 66
CHAPTER 2. TABLES AND FIGURES
Table 1. Sample design ............................................................................................................... 102
Table 2. Group demographics ..................................................................................................... 103
Figure 1. Counter-argumentation: how is country of birth relevant to TB risk? ........................ 104
Figure 2. Reason for TB testing among non-U.S.—born populations........................................ 105
Figure 3. Self-exemption: I passed the TB test before coming here ........................................... 106
CHAPTER 3. TABLES AND FIGURES
Table 1. Clinic characteristics ..................................................................................................... 143
Table 2. In-depth interview participants ..................................................................................... 144
Figure 1. Word Cloud of Last Interaction with the Health Department ..................................... 145
Table 3. Identified themes related to HD role in LTBI testing and treatment scale-up .............. 146
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