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Esther Buregyeya

Uganda

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Project Title

USING SHORT MESSAGE SERVICE REMINDERS AND MOBILE MONEY INCENTIVES TO ENHANCE LINKAGE TO CARE OF PRESUMPTIVE TUBERCULOSIS PATIENTS IN UGANDA: A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL

Project Objectives

Objectives 1. To evaluate the TB diagnostic process and linkage to care by doing cohort analysis. 2. Develop and adapt an SMS reminders and MM incentives to improve linkage to care among TB patients. 3. Conduct a randomized controlled trial of SMS reminders and MM incentives sent to presumptive and confirmed TB patients to improve linkage to care and treatment. 4. To build sustainable capacity in TB research clinical trials in Uganda.

Host Organisation

Department Institution Country
Makerere University UG

EDCTP Project

TMA2018SF-2472

EDCTP Program

EDCTP2

EDCTP Project Call

Senior Fellowship (SF)

Study Design

A three arm, individual-randomized controlled trial

Project Summary

Worldwide, national TB programs try to improve case detection rates and monitoring treatment outcomes, but little is known about the proportion of presumptive tuberculosis (TB) cases that never get tested for TB and the confirmed TB cases that never start treatment in endemic areas like Uganda, despite high prevalence and mortality rates. Uganda notified 43,736 total TB cases in 2015, of these only 53% received TB treatment. Patients can be lost to follow-up (LTFU) after being identified as presumptive TB cases and never get to test for TB or those who test and are confirmed to have TB, can also be lost and never start TB treatment. A systematic review found high levels of pre-treatment LTFU–ranging from 4 to 38%–,and was higher in sub-Saharan Africa (18%) compared to Asia (13%). Consequences of pre-diagnosis and pre-treatment LTFU are; untreated TB patients are infectious and can transmit TB to others and not starting TB treatment at all, causes high morbidity and mortality. Therefore, monitoring outcomes of presumptive TB patients is equally important as monitoring treatment outcomes. Short message service (SMS) and mobile money (MM) incentives has shown promise by improving health outcomes such as uptake of immunization, adherence to TB treatment and ART. However, there is limited knowledge on whether text messages can increase linkage to care and treatment for presumptive TB patients in Uganda and sub-Saharan Africa. The aim of this study is to leverage SMS reminders and MM incentives in improving linkage to care of presumptive TB patients. The aim of the study is increase the proportion of presumptive TB patients that complete diagnosis and pre-treatment TB cases that link to care and treatment using SMS reminders and Mobile Money (MM) incentives.