Abstract
Introduction Tuberculosis (TB) is a global health emergency and low treatment adherence among patients is a major barrier to ending the TB epidemic. The WHO promotes digital adherence technologies (DATs) as facilitators for improving treatment adherence in resource-limited settings. However, limited research has investigated whether DATs improve outcomes for high-risk patients (ie, those with a high probability of an unsuccessful outcome), leading to concerns that DATs may cause intervention-generated inequality. Methods We conducted secondary analyses of data from a completed individual-level randomised controlled trial in Nairobi, Kenya during 2016-2017, which evaluated the average intervention effect of a novel DAT-based behavioural support programme. We trained a causal forest model to answer three research questions: (1) Was the effect of the intervention heterogeneous across individuals? (2) Was the intervention less effective for high-risk patients? nd (3) Can differentiated care improve programme effectiveness and equity in treatment outcomes? Results We found that individual intervention effects - the percentage point reduction in the likelihood of an unsuccessful treatment outcome - ranged from 4.2 to 12.4, with an average of 8.2. The intervention was beneficial for 76% of patients, and most beneficial for high-risk patients. Differentiated enrolment policies, targeted at high-risk patients, have the potential to (1) increase the average intervention effect of DAT services by up to 28.5% and (2) decrease the population average and standard deviation (across patients) of the probability of an unsuccessful treatment outcome by up to 8.5% and 31.5%, respectively. Conclusion This DAT-based intervention can improve outcomes among high-risk patients, reducing inequity in the likelihood of an unsuccessful treatment outcome. In resource-limited settings where universal provision of the intervention is infeasible, targeting high-risk patients for DAT enrolment is a worthwhile strategy for programmes that involve human support sponsors, enabling them to achieve the highest possible impact for high-risk patients at a substantially improved cost-effectiveness ratio.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Boutilier, J. J., Yoeli, E., Rathauser, J., Owiti, P., Subbaraman, R., & Jónasson, J. O. (2022). Can digital adherence technologies reduce inequity in tuberculosis treatment success? Evidence from a randomised controlled trial. BMJ Global Health, 7(12). https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-010512
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.