Piloting the feasibility of a population-based joint TB-HIV survey in KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa, 2019
Pelagia Murangandi, Olanrewaju Oladimeji, Nompumelelo Zungu, Lehlogonolo Makola, Edmore Marinda, Leickness Simbayi, Khangelani Zuma, Shandir Ramlagan, Sean Jooste, Goitseone Maseko, Inbarani Naidoo, Chijioke Nwosu, Stephen McCracken, Sizulu Moyo, Wolfgang Hladik

TL;DR
This study tested the feasibility of combining TB and HIV surveys in South Africa to improve efficiency and data collection.
Contribution
The study piloted a joint TB-HIV survey design and evaluated its feasibility in a real-world setting.
Findings
Combining TB and HIV data collection is feasible but resulted in lower participation compared to individual surveys.
Household uptake was 78.6%, while individual participation at the survey hub was 48.1%.
Additional health measurements had high uptake, exceeding 87%.
Abstract
South Africa bears a high burden of infectious diseases, including intersecting epidemics of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and tuberculosis (TB). Among people living with HIV, TB is the predominant cause of death. Since 2002, South Africa has conducted six national population-based HIV surveys, and its first national TB prevalence survey between 2017 and 2019. Given the epidemiologic overlap of these conditions and dwindling resources, a joint national TB and HIV survey could be advantageous. We piloted a joint survey design in August–September 2019 to assess the feasibility of simultaneously collecting HIV and TB data. The pilot survey utilized the same sampling frame as the 2017–2019 national TB prevalence survey, based on small area layers as building blocks for clusters. Two clusters in KwaZulu-Natal (one urban and one rural) were selected. People of all ages were eligible to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV/AIDS Research and Interventions · Tuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · HIV Research and Treatment
