Determinants of consultation, diagnosis and treatment delays among new smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis patients in morocco: A cross-sectional study

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Abstract

We conducted a cross-sectional survey in 2012 in 12 selected provinces and prefectures in Morocco to determine consultation delay (patient delay), diagnosis delay and treatment delay (health system delays), and factors relating to these delays. The sample included 250 eligible and consenting newly diagnosed smearpositive pulmonary tuberculosis patients who were interviewed at the time of their registration within Diagnosis of Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases Reference Centers (CDTMR) or Integrated Health Centers (CSI) using a pretested and structured questionnaire. The median total delay was 46 days [inter-quartile interval (IQI) = 29–84 days]. Patient delay (median = 20; IQI = 8–47 days) was higher than health system delay (median=15; IIQ = 7–35 days). Being illiterate, thinking symptoms will disappear by themselves; having financial constraints and feeling fear of diagnosis or social isolation were associated with patient delay. Consulting first in the private sector or having 3 or more consultations before diagnosis was associated with health system delay.

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APA

Akrim, M., Bennani, K., Essolbi, A., Sghiar, M., Likos, A., Benmamoun, A., … Maaroufi, A. (2014). Determinants of consultation, diagnosis and treatment delays among new smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis patients in morocco: A cross-sectional study. Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, 20(11), 707–716. https://doi.org/10.26719/2014.20.11.707

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