dc.description.abstract |
Mental disorders account for nine percent of the overall global burden of disease and are
among the top ten leading causes of disability. Mental illness and tuberculosis share risk fac-
tors including poverty, overcrowding, stigma, poor nutrition, substance use and retro-viral
disease co-infection. Presence of mental illness in tuberculosis delays health-seeking,
affects drug adherence, increases cost of treatment, prolongs disease duration, lowers qual-
ity of life, and increases mortality. Early diagnosis, linkage, and treatment of psychiatric mor-
bidity among patients with tuberculosis would improve outcomes for both. This study thus
aimed to determine the prevalence and factors associated with psychiatric morbidity among
patients on treatment for tuberculosis at a low- middle- income country.
Methods
A cross-sectional study carried out at the tuberculosis clinic at Moi Teaching and Referral
Hospital (MTRH), Eldoret, Kenya. 367 participants on TB treatment were interviewed using
Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) tool. The key outcome was presence of
psychiatric illness. Pearson’s Chi-square and logistic regression were used to assess rela-
tionships at bivariate and multivariate level respectively.
Results
Majority of the respondents were male (61.3%) and overall median age was 33 years. About
half of participants (48.5%) had at least one psychiatric illness. Common disorders were
alcohol use disorder (30.3%), depression (23.4%), substance use disorder (12.8%) and sui-
cidality (8.2%). Odds of ‘any psychiatric illness’ were increased by being male (aOR = 1.92;
P = 0.04), being separated or divorced (aOR = 6.86; P = 0.002), using alcohol (aOR = 3.2;
P<0.001), having been previously treated for tuberculosis (aOR = 2.76; P = 0.01), having |
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