Barriers and enablers of TB infection screening and treatment programme for recent migrants in East London

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

O'Brien, K.
Ikram, S.
Burman, M.
Rahman, A.
Patel, P.
Dart, S.
Trathen, D.
Zenner, D.
Malhotra, A. M.
Kunst, H.

Contact

Check for full-text access

Issue Date

2026

Type

Article

Language

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The majority of active TB cases in low-burden, high-income settings arise from reactivation of TB infection (TBI). The London Borough of Newham, UK, piloted a novel screening and treatment TBI programme for recent migrants. This was situated entirely within primary care. OBJECTIVE AND DESIGN: This study aims to highlight key enablers and barriers to delivering a TBI programme in primary care. Views of health care professionals and relevant stakeholders were sought through questionnaires and semi-structured interviews. RESULTS: Perspectives from 43 health care professionals are included. A perceived 'good relationship' between patients and health care professionals was the most commonly cited enablers across groups, followed by education and training of service providers. Physicians reported time constraints as a common barrier, whereas pharmacists were more likely to identify low levels of patient knowledge surrounding TBI as a barrier to engagement. Enablers identified by stakeholders included effective communication between stakeholders and training of service providers. Aggregate data collection and monitoring was considered a significant enabler, as was patient education by health care professionals and novel educational tools. CONCLUSION: Community-based TBI programmes can be successful. Key enablers include TBI-specific training with communities and amongst health care professionals, collaboration between health care professionals and stakeholders, and aggregate data monitoring.

Description

Citation

Publisher

License

Journal

Public health action

Volume

16

Issue

1

PubMed ID

DOI

ISSN

EISSN

Collections