Effectiveness of routine tuberculosis education in a high-burden setting: A prospective observational cohort study
Tyler Scott Johnson, Leah Nanziri, Amanda J. Gupta, Joseph M. Ggita, Mari Armstrong-Hough, Irene Ayakaka, Sheela V. Shenoi, Achilles Katamba, J. Lucian Davis, Meredith Brooks, Hamufare Mugauri, Hamufare Mugauri

TL;DR
This study finds that routine tuberculosis education improves knowledge but has limited long-term impact on treatment adherence in Uganda.
Contribution
The study evaluates the effectiveness of routine TB education on knowledge and adherence in a high-burden setting.
Findings
TB knowledge scores increased by 25 points after education, but only 9% achieved TB literacy.
Higher post-education knowledge was linked to reduced nonadherence at early follow-ups.
Knowledge did not significantly predict overall treatment success.
Abstract
Low adherence to tuberculosis (TB) treatment remains a major driver of adverse health outcomes in high-burden countries. While guidelines recommend routine client education, its effectiveness and the knowledge constructs that influence adherence remain poorly defined. We conducted a prospective cohort study of adults (≥18 years) initiating treatment for drug-susceptible TB in Kampala, Uganda. We assessed clients’ TB knowledge before and after routine education and at the two-week, two-month, and five-month follow-up visits. We recorded self-reported seven-day medication adherence at each visit and final treatment outcomes. We used paired t-tests to compare knowledge scores (0–100) before and after education. We constructed multivariable Poisson and logistic regression models to examine the association of knowledge with the outcomes of nonadherence and WHO-defined treatment success. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · Diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis · Pneumonia and Respiratory Infections
