Impact of COVID-19 restrictive measures on income and health service utilization of tuberculosis patients in India

Author:

Chatterjee SusmitaORCID,Das Palash,Vassall Anna

Abstract

Abstract Background The nationwide lockdown (March 25 to June 8, 2020) to curb the spread of coronavirus infection had significant health and economic impacts on the Indian economy. There is limited empirical evidence on how COVID-19 restrictive measures may impact the economic welfare of specific groups of patients, e.g., tuberculosis patients. We provide the first such evidence for India. Methods A total of 291 tuberculosis patients from the general population and from a high-risk group, patients from tea garden areas, were interviewed at different time points to understand household income loss during the complete lockdown, three and eight months after the complete lockdown was lifted. Income loss was estimated by comparing net monthly household income during and after lockdown with prelockdown income. Tuberculosis service utilization patterns before and during the lockdown period also were examined. Household income loss, travel and other expenses related to tuberculosis drug pickup were presented in 2020 US dollars (1 US$ = INR 74.132). Results 26% of households with tuberculosis patients in tea garden areas and 51% of households in the general population had zero monthly income during the complete lockdown months (April–May 2020). Overall income loss slowly recovered during July–August compared to April–May 2020. Approximately 7% of patients in the general population and 4% in tea garden areas discontinued their tuberculosis medicines because of the complete lockdown. Conclusion Discontinuation of medicine will have an additional burden on the tuberculosis elimination program in terms of additional cases, including multidrug resistant tuberculosis cases. Income loss for households and poor restoration of income after the lockdown will likely have an impact on the nutrition of tuberculosis patients and families. Tuberculosis patients working in the informal sector were the worst affected group during the nationwide lockdown. This emphasizes that a policy priority must continue to protect those working in informal sectors from the economic consequences of such restrictive measures, including paid sick leave, additional food support, and direct benefit transfers. Alongside ensuring widespread access to COVID-19 vaccines, these policy actions remain pivotal in ensuring the well-being of those who are unfortunate enough to be living with tuberculosis.

Funder

The Wellcome Trust DBT India Alliance

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Infectious Diseases

Reference18 articles.

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3. Stop TB, Partnership I, College A, Health JH, University USAID. 2020. The potential impact of the Covid-19 response on tuberculosis in high-burden countries: a modelling analysis. http://www.stoptb.org/assets/documents/news/Modeling%20Report_1%20May%202020_FINAL.pdf.

4. Dalberg. 2020. Minimizing the impact of the pandemic on India’s most vulnerable populations. https://dalberg.com/our-ideas/minimizing-the-impact-of-the-pandemic-on-indias-most-vulnerable-populations/.

5. World Bank. 2021. Economic effects of COVID-19: rapid surveys of rural households in India. https://pubdocs.worldbank.org/en/645971613651626018/Economic-Effects-of-COVID19-Rapid-Rural-Surveys.pdf.

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