How the HIV/TB co-epidemic-HIV stigma-TB stigma' syndemic impacts on the use of occupational health services for TB in South African hospitals: A structural equation modelling analysis of the baseline data from the HaTSaH Study (cluster RCT)

Edwin Wouters, André Janse Van Rensburg, Michelle Engelbrecht, Veerle Buffel, Linda Campbell, Nina Sommerland, Asta Rau, G. Kigozi, Josefien Van Olmen, Caroline Masquillier

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9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Introduction Tuberculosis (TB) has become an occupational health hazard in South African hospitals where healthcare workers (HCWs) are additionally confronted daily with HIV and its associated stigma, causing a syndemic. Early TB diagnosis and treatment are vital, but the uptake of these services through occupational healthcare units (OHUs) is low. The current study hypothesises that (1) the link between HIV and TB and (2) the perceived HIV stigmatisation by colleagues create (3) a double HIV-TB stigma which increases (4) internalised TB stigma and leads to (5) a lower willingness to use OHU services for TB screening and treatment. Design A cross-sectional study using the baseline data from the HIV and TB Stigma among Healthcare workers Study (HaTSaH Study). Setting Six hospitals in the Free State province of South Africa. Participants 820 HCWs of the six selected hospitals. Results The study results demonstrate that the co-epidemic (β=0.399 (screening model) and β=0.345 (treatment model)) combined (interaction effect: β=0.133 (screening) and β=0.132 (treatment)) with the persistent stigmatisation of HIV is altering the attitudes towards TB (β=0.345 (screening) and β=0.400 (treatment)), where the stigmatising views of HIV are transferred to TB - illustrating the syndemic impact. Our model demonstrated that this syndemic not only leads to higher levels of internal TB stigma (β=0.421 (screening) and β=0.426 (treatment)), but also to a lower willingness to use the OHU for TB screening (probit coefficient=-0.216) and treatment (probit coefficient=-0.160). Confidentiality consistently emerged as a contextual correlate of OHU use. Conclusions Theoretically, our results confirm HIV as a syndemic generator' which changes the social meaning of TB in the hospital context. Practically, the study demonstrated that the syndemic of TB and HIV in a highly endemic context with stigma impacts the intended use of occupational TB services. Trial registration number Pre-results of the trial registered at the South African National Clinical Trials Register, registration ID: DOH-27-1115-5204.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere045477
Number of pages10
JournalBMJ Open
Volume12
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Apr 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Funding The project was funded by Research Foundation Flanders (G035216 N), VLIRUOS (ZEIN2015PR415) and the Special Research Fund of the University of Antwerp (32124).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 BMJ Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • HIV & AIDS
  • occupational & industrial medicine
  • tuberculosis

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