Determinants of Pulmonary Tuberculosis in Public Health Facilities of Dire Dawa City Administration, Eastern Ethiopia, Case-control Study, 2017
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Abstract
Background: The World Health Organization global reports on Tuberculosis showed that
Ethiopia is among the ten top high burden countries in terms of prevalence or incidence.
According to Federal Ministry of Health Annual performance report in 2014/15 there was high
Tuberculosis case notification in Dire Dawa city administration which was 400/100,000 cases
were reported. Therefore, the aim of this study was to identify the determinants factors of
pulmonary tuberculosis among individuals aged above 15 years old in public health facilities of
Dire Dawa city Administration.
Methods: Unmatched case–control study design was implemented in public health facilities of
Dire Dawa city administration from October to December 2017. The study population included
285 subjects (95 cases and 190 controls in a ratio of 1:2). The data was entered into Epi-Info 7,
cleared and analyzed with SPSS version 20. A binary logistic analysis was used to measure the
association between the dependent variable and independent variables using an Odds Ratio and
95% CI and Statistical significance was set at α ≤ 0.05.
Result: The mean age was 32.46 ±12.72 years and 32.66 ± 12.54 years for cases and controls
respectively. Multivariable logistic regression showed that patients who had no formal education
(AOR: 7.6; 95% CI, 3.7–15.4), Male patients (AOR: 2.9; 95% CI: 1.5-5.5), having no income
and earning low income (AOR: 3.9; 95%CI: 1.4-10.7) and (AOR: 2.8; 95%CI: 1.2-6.5)
respectively, housing affordability (Rented) (AOR: 4.9; 95%CI: 2.6-9.4), HIV Positive (AOR:
3.3; 95%CI: 1.2-9.4), contact history (AOR: 8.6; 95% CI: 3.9–19.3), Low Body Mass Index
(AOR: 19.8; 95%CI: 8.7-45.5), cigarette smoking (AOR: 7.7; 95%CI: 2.7-21.8) and having
separated kitchen (AOR: 0.25; 95%CI: 0.13-0.48) were significantly associated with pulmonary
TB status.
Conclusion: This study showed Gender, Educational status, Monthly income, Smoking
cigarette, Contact history, Low Body Mass Index, Being HIV positive and not having separated
kitchen were significantly associated with being infected with Pulmonary TB. Efforts to reduce
Pulmonary TB infection among HIV patients should be strengthened by health professionals
especially at ART department.