Conducting Patient-Pathway Analysis to Inform Programming of Tuberculosis Services: Methods

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Abstract

Patient-centered care is a central pillar of the World Health Organization's End TB Strategy. Understanding where patients access health services is a first step to planning for the placement of services to meet patient needs and preferences. The patient-pathway analysis (PPA) methodology detailed in this article was developed to better understand the alignment between patient care seeking and tuberculosis service availability. A PPA describes the steps that people with tuberculosis take from the initial care visit to cure. The results of a PPA reveal programmatic gaps in care seeking, diagnosis, treatment initiation, and continuity of care. They can be used as inputs to an evidence-based process of identifying and developing interventions to address the gaps in patient care. This paper summarizes the steps to conduct a PPA and serves as the basis for understanding country case studies that profile the use of PPA.

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Hanson, C. L., Osberg, M., Brown, J., Durham, G., & Chin, D. P. (2017). Conducting Patient-Pathway Analysis to Inform Programming of Tuberculosis Services: Methods. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 216, S679–S685. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jix387

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