Acceptability of tongue swabs for tuberculosis screening in migrant settings in northern Italy: A qualitative study
Renée Codsi, Francesca Saluzzo, Rachel C. Wood, Alaina M. Olson, Giulia Russo, Luca Ragazzoni, Ramya Kumar, George Wanje, Marlana Kohn, Giovanni Fumagalli, Luigi R. Codecasa, Gerard A. Cangelosi, Daniela Maria Cirillo, Miguel Angel Garcia-Bereguiain

TL;DR
A study in northern Italy found that tongue swabs are a more acceptable and easier method for TB screening among migrants compared to traditional sputum collection.
Contribution
The study introduces supervised self-swabbing as a practical and acceptable alternative for TB screening in migrant populations.
Findings
Most participants preferred tongue swabs over sputum collection due to simplicity and privacy.
Language barriers and trust issues with the healthcare system were identified as key challenges.
Educational materials tailored to migrants' cultural and linguistic needs are recommended to improve TB screening uptake.
Abstract
Human migrations, driven by economic hardship, conflict, and climate change, complicate the global fight against tuberculosis (TB). New strategies are needed to improve the screening of migrants for active TB disease. Current sputum-based testing methods are logistically challenging in many settings. Alternative sampling with tongue swabs is designed to be easier than sputum collection and exhibits acceptable accuracy. This study characterized the acceptability of supervised self-swabbing (SSS) for TB screening in migrant settings in Northern Italy.Migrants arriving through the Central Mediterranean route to Italy were purposely sampled to participate in in-depth interviews (IDIs), which were conducted with the support of a cultural mediator. Data was analyzed using a rapid qualitative analysis approach. The Capability, Opportunity, Motivation-Behavior (COM-B) model guided the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · Data-Driven Disease Surveillance · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections
