Journal article
Bridging the knowledge-practice gap in tuberculosis contact management in a high-burden setting: a mixed-methods protocol for a multicenter health system strengthening study
T Lestari, S Graham, C Van den Boogard, R Triasih, JR Poespoprodjo, RR Ubra, E Kenangalem, Y Mahendradhata, NM Anstey, RS Bailie, AP Ralph
Implementation Science | BMC | Published : 2019
Abstract
Background: People in close contact with tuberculosis should have screening and appropriate management, as an opportunity for active case detection and prevention. However, implementation of tuberculosis contact screening and management is limited in high-burden settings. Behaviour change is needed across three levels of the healthcare system - policymakers, healthcare providers, and patients. To bridge the wide policy-practice gap, this study draws on the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research, the Behaviour Change Wheel, and the RE-AIM model (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance) to respectively understand barriers, implement change, and evaluate process ..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This project is funded by the Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade grant number 1132089 (the 'Tropical Disease Regional Research Collaboration initiative'); Charles Darwin University (Australian Postgraduate Award to TL, under the scheme 'Improving Health Outcomes in the Tropical North: A Multidisciplinary Collaboration (HOT NORTH)', Australian National Health and Medical Research (NHMRC) grant number 1131932). APR and NMA are supported by NHMRC fellowships.