Author:
Alene Kefyalew Addis,Wangdi Kinley,Colquhoun Samantha,Chani Kudakwashe,Islam Tauhid,Rahevar Kalpeshsinh,Morishita Fukushi,Byrne Anthony,Clark Justin,Viney Kerri
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The sustainable development goals aim to improve health for all by 2030. They incorporate ambitious goals regarding tuberculosis (TB), which may be a significant cause of disability, yet to be quantified. Therefore, we aimed to quantify the prevalence and types of TB-related disabilities.
Methods
We performed a systematic review of TB-related disabilities. The pooled prevalence of disabilities was calculated using the inverse variance heterogeneity model. The maps of the proportions of common types of disabilities by country income level were created.
Results
We included a total of 131 studies (217,475 patients) that were conducted in 49 countries. The most common type of disabilities were mental health disorders (23.1%), respiratory impairment (20.7%), musculoskeletal impairment (17.1%), hearing impairment (14.5%), visual impairment (9.8%), renal impairment (5.7%), and neurological impairment (1.6%). The prevalence of respiratory impairment (61.2%) and mental health disorders (42.0%) was highest in low-income countries while neurological impairment was highest in lower middle-income countries (25.6%). Drug-resistant TB was associated with respiratory (58.7%), neurological (37.2%), and hearing impairments (25.0%) and mental health disorders (26.0%), respectively.
Conclusions
TB-related disabilities were frequently reported. More uniform reporting tools for TB-related disability and further research to better quantify and mitigate it are urgently needed.
Prospero registration number
CRD42019147488
Funder
The End TB Unit, World Health Organization, Regional Office of the Western Pacific
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
47 articles.
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