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CHO-CH13: Addressing gender Inequalities

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  • Wellness Activity for TB Patients

    Content

    Yoga

    • Yoga aims at holistic functioning of the mind and body. It consists of various exercises and specific body positions and movements(yoga asana) which can be learnt and performed under the supervision of a yoga teacher.
    • Yoga will help to clean the upper respiratory tract and the sinuses. The breathing exercise or pranayama induce relaxation and help to reduce the stress levels of the patients considerably.

     

    Meditation

    • Meditation is a practice where an individual uses a technique – such as mindfulness, or focusing the mind on a particular object, thought, or activity – to train attention and awareness, and achieve a mentally clear and emotionally calm and stable state.

     

    Exercise

    • Exercise is being recognized as an important modality for gaining good health and recovering from illness and disease.
    • Exercise like cycling and walking are great ways to make sure that the TB infection that was once in your system has been completely eradicated. Once recovered, it is a good idea to keep up the exercise, as this is a factor in stopping the TB from returning at a later date.
    • Rehabilitation Service to TB Patients

    • Emotional support must be provided to patients with TB and their families during illness. Receiving TB diagnosis is often regarded by patients as a real stigma that isolates them from their family and society. Psychologists can support patients to help reduce misconceptions and socially integrate former patients.

     

    • TB is a contagious disease that induces fear and social isolation and needs a long period of drug administration, sometimes with adverse effects. Therefore, therapeutic education is very important, which serves the purpose of explaining to patients and their families about the condition of the disease, the risks of contagiousness, the stages of treatment and prognosis.

     

    • Exercise may be light initially, followed by assisted and active exercise. Once the patient’s condition is stable, a 6-minute walk test may be done in the room or corridor. The intensity should be progressively increased, depending on the patient’s tolerance.

     

    • Nutrition: Weight loss is associated with fatigue and decreased exercise capacity. There is a risk for the patient not recovering body weight at the end of drug therapy, despite receiving correct TB treatment. Nutritional supplementation may play a positive role in the recovery of these patients.

     

    • Tuberculosis Drug side effects: A proactive clinical approach is required to replace/stop the use of the concerned drugs.

     

    • Providing Assistive devices Hearing aids, cochlear implants, tinnitus-masking devices, mobility aids, and prosthetic/orthotic devices improve the quality of life of patients.

     

    • Corrective Surgery: May be required in TB of the bones, spine etc.

     

    • Community and home-based care: This becomes important in severe neuromuscular deficits and movement disabilities.

     

    • Physiotherapy: A trained physiotherapist may help through:
      • Sputum clearance technique for reduced sputum quantity, better ventilation and relief of symptoms
      • Cough education involving body positioning during coughing, control of breathing in coughing to achieve mobilization and secretions

     

    • Counselling: Psychological support is required for facing long-term/permanent disabilities like loss of vision and hearing loss as side effects of the drugs, paralysis in TB meningitis, infertility in genital TB etc.

     

    • Livelihood options: NGOs and support groups can create such options and/or facilitate treated patients to find various livelihood options
  • Psychosocial Support to TB Patients

    Content

    Who can provide Psychosocial support?

    Family Members, Peer groups, treatment support groups, TB Champions, Community Health Volunteers(CHVs) and NGOs can provide psychosocial support to TB patients and their families by:

     

    • Building a strong sense of community
    • Helping the patients to contact a health worker or visit a health facility
    • Providing treatment support to take their drugs and finish their treatment. Family members, community-based volunteers and workers can be trained as treatment supporters by NGOs
    • Facilitating patients to access DBT for nutritional support under NPY
    • Helping TB patients with comorbidities to visit the referral facility for treatment
    • Treatment adherence support through peer support and education and individual follow up
    • Home-based palliative care for TB
    • Awareness generation, providing right information, behaviour change communication and community mobilisation for reducing stigma and discrimination
    • Facilitating patients to join yoga/meditation/exercise groups once the active phase is over
    • Facilitating and arranging rehabilitative services for problems/disabilities in TB patients
    • Social and livelihood support
    • Food supplementation
    • Income-generation activities(NGO can start or facilitate patients to join activities like candle making, making festival-related goods)
    • Sensitising PRIs to engage TB patients(who can work) through the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme(MGNREGS)
  • Rehabilitation service to TB patients

    Content

     

    The holistic management of Tuberculosis (TB) patients can improve their life expectancy. The importance of addressing malnutrition, adverse drug reactions, psycho-social well-being, and catastrophic expenses correctly and in a timely fashion is essential in reducing morbidity and mortality.  

     

    Table: Rehabilitation services for TB patients
    Rehabilitation Services for TB Patients  Care Providers  Key Components 
    Nutritional Rehabilitation 

    1. Senior Treatment Supervisor 

    2. TB Health Visitors 

    3. Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) 

    4. Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM) 

    5. TB treatment supporter 

    6. Medical officers at Peripheral Health Centre (PHC), Community Health Centre (CHC) level 

    • Supporting nutritional needs of TB patients through Ni-kshay Poshan Yojana 

    • Management of undernutrition in nutrition rehabilitation centres (NRCs) 

    • Linkages for extra nutritional support for TB patients like the public distribution system (PDS) or food security act. 

    Pulmonary Rehabilitation 

    1.Physiotherapists (preferable one male and one female)  

    2. Nurses  

    3. Attendant 

    Management of physical and psychological impairment due to the disease to lower the handicap. 
    Physical Rehabilitation 
    1. therapists (preferable one male and one female)

    2.  Nurse  Doctors

    3. Surgeons

    4. Physio

    5. Attendant 

    • Management of post-treatment sequelae by early identification and periodic assessment. 

    • Comorbidity management 

    Social Rehabilitation 

    1. TB Health Visitors 

    2. Accredited Social 

    3. Health Activists (ASHAs) 

    4. Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM) 

    5. TB treatment supporter 

    6. Medical officers at PHC, CHC level 

    7. Ni-kshay Mitra 

    • Linkage for vocational rehabilitation e.g., Skill India

    • Synergy between social welfare support systems like: 

    1. Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY) 

    2. TB pension schemes 

    3. National rural employment guarantee scheme 

    4. National Health Protection Scheme (NHPS) for palliative care and rehabilitation

     Mental Rehabilitation 

    1. Psychiatrist 

    2. Psychologists / Counsellors 

    3. TB Health Visitors 

    4. Accredited Social  

    5. Health Activists (ASHAs) 

    6. Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM) 

    7. TB treatment supporter 

    8. Medical officers at PHC, CHC level 

    • Psychological counselling to the patient and caregivers. 

    • Assisting patients in the planning of decisions related to the end-of-life stage.      

     

    Patient rehabilitation is ensured by: 

    1.   

    1. 1. IT-based monitoring via Ni-kshay platform 

    1. 2. Community-based monitoring  

    1. 3. Surveillance: A comprehensive surveillance system for TB patients and their providers built into eNikshay. This is supported by a call centre for user-friendly private reporting and patient monitoring. 

     

     

    Resource 

      

    • National Strategic Plan for Tuberculosis Elimination 2017–2025, CTD, 2017. 

    • Guidelines for Programmatic Management of Drug-resistant TB in India, Central TB Division, 2021.  

      

    Assessment 

     
     
     
     
     
     

      

      

      

      

     Question    

     
     
     
     

      

      

      

      

    Answer 1    

     
     
     
     

      

      

      

      

    Answer 2    

     
     
     
     

      

      

      

      

    Answer 3    

     
     
     
     

      

      

      

      

    Answer 4    

     
     
     
     

      

      

      

      

    Correct answer    

     
     
     
     

      

      

      

      

    Correct explanation    

     
     
     
     

      

      

    Rehabilitation services to TB patients comprise Nutritional, Physical, Pulmonary, Social and Mental Rehabilitation. 

     
     

      

      

     False 

     
     

      

      

     True 

     
     

      

      

       

     
     

      

      

       

     
     

      

      

     2 

     
     

      

      

    The holistic management of tuberculosis (TB) patients can improve life expectancy. The importance of addressing malnutrition, adverse drug reactions, psycho-social well-being, and catastrophic expenses correctly and in a timely fashion is essential in reducing morbidity and mortality. 

     

     

  • Role of Health Volunteers in Digital Interventions

    Content

    Ensuring access to DBT for all patients in catchment area

    Community Health Volunteers need to take a proactive role for awareness generation about the scheme and its benefits. S/he along with the team of TBHVs and PHI staff should ensure that NPY(Nikshay Poshan Yojana) is accessible to every patient in her/his catchment area. S/he should ensure that

    • Al TB patients are aware of NPY and its availability at all PHIs/DTC, and with private treatment providers
    • Registration of all TB patients on NIKSHAY portal
    • Ensuring that the patient provides an authorized identity proof at the time of registration
    • Providing her/his bank details so as to receive benefits for nutritional support through DBT at NIKSHAY

    Incentive Icons - Download Free Vector Icons | Noun Project

    Channelize the patient issue(if any)

    Community Health Volunteers should be well aware of the patient registration process in the digital ICT intervention steps of Nikshay. They should be able to channelize/help patients with the registration process and make the patient well aware of the various SMS that are triggered to the patient.

     

     

    Community Health Volunteers should also inform about TB Aarogya Sathi App.

     

  • Treatment Supporter Honorarium Eligibility

    Content

    Treatment supporters are eligible for Honorarium at the end of TB patients treatment, only if the patient's treatment outcome has been declared either as "Cured “or "Treatment Complete".

     

    The eligible amount of honorarium is

    • Rs. 1,000 for DSTB Patients and for
    • Rs. 5,000 for DRTB patients. 

     

    These benefit amount are processed through Nikshay and below are the prerequisite conditions that needs to be met in Nikshay, for generating incentive

    • Treatment supporter should be registered and enabled for receiving honorarium from Nikshay.
    • Bank details of Treatment supporter should be submitted to the nearest NTEP health facility staff.
    • In Nikshay, this is the only scheme where benefits are generated manually by TU users - STS
    • Nikshay will allow NTEP TU users to generate benefits, only if
      • ​Treatment Outcome has been declared as "Cured “or "Treatment Complete"
      • Patient duplication status should be Unique i.e. Nikshay marks the patient duplicate based on Gender and Mobile Number
    • For DSTB patient, one benefit of maximum amount of Rs. 1,000 can be created if outcome is updated as “Cured” or “Treatment Completed
    • For DR TB patients two benefits can be generated in Nikshay:
      • First benefit of maximum amount Rs. 2,000 can be created at end IP - Intensive Phase (i.e. Initiation Date + 6 months)
      • Second benefit of maximum amount Rs. 3,000 can be created if Outcome is updated as “Cured” or “Treatment Completed”
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