The Role of Trust as a Driver of Private-Provider Participation in Disease Surveillance: Cross-Sectional Survey From Nigeria
Ellen MH Mitchell, Olusola Adedeji Adejumo, Hussein Abdur-Razzaq, Chidubem Ogbudebe, Mustapha Gidado

TL;DR
This study explores how trust influences private healthcare providers in Nigeria to report tuberculosis cases to public health authorities.
Contribution
The study highlights the role of trust in shaping private providers' TB notification behavior within disease surveillance systems.
Findings
Private providers with lower perceived benevolence of public health authorities were less likely to notify TB cases.
Self-reported notification behavior did not match actual TB notifications, suggesting potential overestimation in surveys.
Building trust in public health systems is crucial for improving surveillance participation.
Abstract
Recognition of the importance of valid, real-time knowledge of infectious disease risk has renewed scrutiny into private providers’ intentions, motives, and obstacles to comply with an Integrated Disease Surveillance Response (IDSR) framework. Appreciation of how private providers’ attitudes shape their tuberculosis (TB) notification behaviors can yield lessons for the surveillance of emerging pathogens, antibiotic stewardship, and other crucial public health functions. Reciprocal trust among actors and institutions is an understudied part of the “software” of surveillance. We aimed to assess the self-reported knowledge, motivation, barriers, and TB case notification behavior of private health care providers to public health authorities in Lagos, Nigeria. We measured the concordance between self-reported notification, TB cases found in facility records, and actual notifications…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVaccine Coverage and Hesitancy · Misinformation and Its Impacts · Data-Driven Disease Surveillance
