Resilience strengthening of tuberculosis diagnostic services under national tuberculosis program to withstand pandemic situations

Sarika Jain, M. Singhai, V. Chadha, N. Somashekar
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Abstract

In the midst of extraordinary challenges, uncertainty, and the rapidly changing scenario of the prevailing COVID-19 pandemic, existing tuberculosis (TB) laboratories worldwide had to gear up on very short notice to face the dual challenge of fulfilling the increasing demands of laboratory testing for COVID-19 while simultaneously continuing the TB services. The brunt of the same fell on routine TB laboratory services, which include diagnostics (microscopy, rapid molecular testing, culture, and drug-susceptibility testing), and activities of training, quality assurance, and research pertaining to TB worldwide. With the sudden eruption and rapid spread of the global pandemic of COVID-19, TB diagnostic services were affected or disrupted especially where laboratories lacked adequate infrastructure and adequate resources for safe handling of specimens. The human resource challenges such as panic and apprehensions among laboratory workers to deal with newer pathogens, particularly those performing direct smear microscopy, along with staff shortage due to deployment in COVID-19 management duties and the pressure of continuing TB services with enhanced biosafety practices were difficult to handle. We also experienced decline in specimen workload at our national reference laboratory for TB diagnosis by 31% in 2020 as compared to pre-COVID period (2019). This is worrisome as undiagnosed TB as well as improper follow-up of those on TB treatment during the peak of COVID-19 pandemic could be associated with enhanced community transmission of TB and poorer patient outcomes. As the COVID-19 pandemic stretched out untiringly in the country and world over, we rapidly need to adapt and find ways to effectively sustain TB diagnostic services, training and research activities. In this perspective, we document current challenges of TB laboratories and suggest robust ways to address them including biosafety concerns. The safe integration of diagnostic services for TB and where required newer airborne pathogens, to ensure uninterrupted TB services, must be the utmost priority in the face of ongoing and any future unprecedented pandemics.
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复原力:根据国家结核病规划加强结核病诊断服务,以抵御流行病
面对非同寻常的挑战、不确定性和2019冠状病毒病大流行迅速变化的情况,世界各地现有的结核病实验室必须在极短的时间内做好准备,以应对双重挑战,既要满足日益增长的COVID-19实验室检测需求,又要继续提供结核病服务。常规结核病实验室服务也受到同样的冲击,其中包括诊断(显微镜、快速分子检测、培养和药敏试验),以及世界各地与结核病有关的培训、质量保证和研究活动。随着COVID-19全球大流行的突然爆发和迅速蔓延,结核病诊断服务受到影响或中断,特别是在实验室缺乏足够的基础设施和足够的资源来安全处理标本的情况下。人力资源方面的挑战,如实验室工作人员在处理新病原体时的恐慌和担忧,特别是那些进行直接涂片显微镜检查的人员,以及因部署COVID-19管理职责而导致的人员短缺,以及继续提供加强生物安全做法的结核病服务的压力,都难以应对。与covid前(2019年)相比,2020年我们国家结核病诊断参考实验室的标本工作量也减少了31%。这令人担忧,因为在2019冠状病毒病大流行高峰期间,未确诊的结核病以及对结核病治疗患者随访不当可能与结核病社区传播加剧和患者预后恶化有关。随着COVID-19大流行在该国和世界各地的持续蔓延,我们需要迅速适应并找到有效维持结核病诊断服务、培训和研究活动的方法。从这个角度来看,我们记录了结核病实验室目前面临的挑战,并提出了解决这些挑战的有力方法,包括生物安全问题。面对正在发生的和未来任何前所未有的大流行病,必须将结核病诊断服务和在需要时更新的空气传播病原体安全整合起来,以确保不间断的结核病服务。
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