African Journal of Community and Environmental Health | 07 February 2012
Evaluation of Community-Led Tuberculosis Control Programmes in Urban Informal Settlements of Nairobi, Kenya: Focus on Early Detection, Treatment Adherence, and Social Determinants of Health Metrics
O, d, h, i, a, m, b, o, K, i, b, e, t, N, g, i, n, a
Abstract
Urban informal settlements in Nairobi, Kenya face significant challenges related to tuberculosis (TB) control due to overcrowding and limited access to healthcare services. A mixed-methods approach combining qualitative interviews with quantitative data collection using a structured questionnaire among 200 participants in urban informal settlements. Early detection rates increased by 35% after implementing community-led screening programmes compared to baseline levels. Treatment adherence was significantly improved, with 78% of participants adhering to treatment protocols over the six-month period. Community-led TB control programmes demonstrated positive impacts on early detection and treatment adherence in urban informal settlements, though social determinants such as poverty remained a significant challenge. Continued support for community health workers and integration of social services into TB control strategies are recommended to enhance long-term success. Tuberculosis, Urban Informal Settlements, Early Detection, Treatment Adherence, Social Determinants of Health Treatment effect was estimated with $\text{logit}(p<em>i)=\beta</em>0+\beta^\top X_i$, and uncertainty reported using confidence-interval based inference.