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Rewards for Tuberculosis Contact Screening

Rewards for Tuberculosis Contact Screening

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02234908
Acronym
RECON
Enrollment
301
Registered
2014-09-09
Start date
2014-10-31
Completion date
2016-12-31
Last updated
2021-01-08

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Tuberculosis, Drug-resistant Tuberculosis

Keywords

Tuberculosis, Drug-resistant tuberculosis, Incentives, Symptom screening

Brief summary

This pilot project is an evaluation of the feasibility, acceptability, and cost of offering an economic reward, in the form of a shopping voucher, to the household contacts of index patients (outpatient drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB patients) who present at the study clinic for TB screening and optional HIV testing, providing a reward to the index patients for participating, and entering index patients whose contacts do present into a lottery to win a prize.The effectiveness of the intervention in screening a high proportion of contacts will be compared to existing published data from studies of active case-finding through home visits and of the status quo passive case finding. If successful, this pilot project will create a demand for screening among high risk patients, who will be rewarded for identifying themselves to the healthcare system, and could prove to be an affordable alternative to resource-intensive home visits. It will also shift responsibility for contact tracing from overburdened clinic staff to those who have the most to gain from early case detection-the patients and their families.

Detailed description

Despite the success of antiretroviral treatment (ART) programs in reaching \> 10 million HIV-infected patients in resource-limited countries over the past decade, HIV and tuberculosis (TB), continue to take a heavy toll on survival and health in southern Africa. In South Africa, where 6.4 million people are estimated to be HIV-positive and up to 2.1 million are on ART, TB incidence is the second highest in the world (after Swaziland), 65% of TB patients are HIV-infected, and TB remains the leading natural cause of death. Drug-resistant TB (DR-TB) is even more concerning, with more than 15,000 South African patients diagnosed with multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) in 2012, nearly a fifth of the global total, and very high mortality among those receiving standard MDR-TB treatment. Because of the high risk of both TB and HIV among the household contacts of TB patients and the importance of early case detection for both diseases and especially for DR-TB, improving TB case finding is a high priority. Recent studies have shown that having healthcare workers make multiple visits to the homes of TB patients in order to screen household contacts is a logistically challenging and resource- intensive strategy, and it is not routinely undertaken in most public sector settings in South Africa. One alternative to home visits that could prove effective and affordable is to offer small economic rewards to the household contacts of TB patients who voluntarily present at a healthcare facility for TB symptom screening and optional HIV testing. Economic incentives have been successful in increasing demand for healthcare in a variety of settings, but they have not been tried before as a way to increase uptake of services among patients' contacts, rather than among the diagnosed patients themselves. This pilot project is an evaluation of the feasibility and results of offering an economic reward, in the form of a shopping voucher, to the household contacts of index patients (outpatient drug-susceptible and drug-resistant TB patients) who present at the study clinic for TB screening and optional HIV testing, providing a reward to the index patients for participating, and entering index patients whose contacts do present into a lottery to win a prize. The effectiveness of the intervention in screening a high proportion of contacts will be compared to existing published data from studies of active case-finding through home visits and of the status quo passive case finding. If successful, this pilot project will create a demand for screening among high risk patients, who will be rewarded for identifying themselves to the healthcare system, and could prove to be an affordable alternative to resource-intensive home visits. It will also shift responsibility for contact tracing from overburdened clinic staff to those who have the most to gain from early case detection-the patients and their families.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALContacts

Household contacts who come to the study clinic, present a referral card, and complete TB symptom screening will receive a shopping voucher of $5-10 value.

BEHAVIORALIndex

Index subjects will be entered in a prize lottery if any of their contacts complete TB symptom screening at the study clinic.

Sponsors

University of Witwatersrand, South Africa
CollaboratorOTHER
City of Johannesburg
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Helen Joseph Hospital
CollaboratorOTHER
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
CollaboratorNIH
Boston University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

for index cases: * Adult patients (\>18 years) * Newly diagnosed with pulmonary TB (drug-susceptible or drug-resistant) or initiating treatment for TB at one of the study sites

Exclusion criteria

for index cases: * Resident outside the site's permissible catchment area for service delivery * No household contacts (live alone) * Admitted for inpatient care immediately following their TB diagnosis, and thus not readily able to distribute the referral cards * Not physically, mentally, or emotionally able to participate in the study, in the view of study staff * Previously enrolled in the same study * Declines to provide written informed consent to participate * Unable to speak any of the languages for which consent documents are available and not accompanied by person who can Inclusion criteria for contacts: * Usually spend at least 4 nights per week in the same household as an index case * Can provide referral card given to contact by index patient

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Proportion of household contacts volunteering for TB symptom screening30 daysThe primary quantitative outcome is uptake of TB symptom screening, defined as the proportion of reported household contacts who complete TB symptom screening within 1 month of index subject enrollment.

Countries

South Africa

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026