Volume 76, Number 4, 461-467, DOI: 10.1007/BF02351503

Incentives and accessibility: A pilot study to promote adherence to TB prophylaxis in a high-risk community

Jennifer Lorvick, Suzanne Thompson, Brian R. Edlin, Alex H. Kral, Alan R. Lifson and John K. Watters

View Related Documents

Abstract

Setting  

A community-based directly observed preventive therapy (DOPT) program for treatment of latent tuberculosis infection among injection drug users (IDUs) in an innercity neighborhood.

Objective  

To test adherence to a 6-month course of DOPT using cash incentives and an easily accessible neighborhood location.

Design  

Street-recruited IDUs (N=205) were screened forMycobacterium tuberculosis (TB) infection using the Mantoux test and two controls. Subjects who had a purified protein derivative (PPD) reaction of ≥5 mm, were anergic, or had a history of a positive PPD received clinical evaluation at a community field site, provided in collaboration with the San Francisco Department of Public Health Tuberculosis Clinic. Twenty-eight subjects were considered appropriate candidates for prophylaxis with isoniazid, and 27 enrolled in the pilot study. Participants received twice-weekly DOPT at a community satellite office, with a $10 cash incentive at each visit.

Results  

The 6-month (26-week) regimen was completed by 24/27 (89%) participants. The median time to treatment completion was 27 weeks (range 26 to 34 weeks). The median proportion of dosing days attended in 6 months was 96%.

Conclusion  

Community-based DOPT using cash incentives resulted in high levels of adherence and treatment completion among drug users.

Key Words  Adherence - Incentives - Tuberculosis - Injection Drug Users - Directly Observed Preventive Therapy

the late Dr. Watters was with the Urban Health Study.

Fulltext Preview

Image of the first page of the fulltext document