Perceptions, Attitudes, Experiences and Opinions of Tuberculosis Associated Stigma: A Qualitative Study of the Perspectives among the Bolgatanga Municipality People of Ghana
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Purpose
1.3. Significance
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Population, Data Collection, and Study Design
2.1.1. Groups of Participants
2.1.2. The Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria of the Participants
2.1.3. Study Participants Recruitment Procedure
2.1.4. Transcription and Translation Procedures
2.1.5. Trustworthiness
2.1.6. Human Subject Protection
2.1.7. Operational Definitions of the Concepts
- Stigma: Stigma described as the processes of different labeling of individuals, stereotyping in negative way, cognitive separation, negative emotional reactions, status loss, and discrimination that lead to detrimental consequences [24].
- Perception: Perception is the process of individual feeling, experiences, needs, motivation, and educational background and concludes with thinking, analyzing, and interpretation of the environment [25].
- Attitudes: Attitudes describe a person’s behavior towards other persons or objects. Attitudes towards different individuals, institutions, and social issues reflect the way to perceive the world around the person [26].
- Opinions: Opinions are evaluative beliefs and are usually narrow in content or scope. They involve individual’s judgments about the probability of events or associations regarding some object on specific dimensions [26].
2.2. Data Analyses
3. Results
3.1. Socio-Demographic Characteristics of the Participants
3.2. Data Are Presented with the Following Four Themes
3.2.1. Theme #1: Perception of Signs and Symptoms Described by TB Infected Patients
“Before we came to the hospital, I vomited when I ate. I also complained of rib and chest pains. So, it was my son who even told me that I was sick and when we came to the hospital, they took radiography and then told me it was TB.”—Female TB patient #1
Another respondent, fifty years of age and with nine years of schooling, said:“I had pain on my chest and when I cough it contracted. I knew it was TB and when I told people about it, they said that was TB. So, I must come to the hospital because the way I was coughing if I stay at home with it would not be fine. So, I came here with my brother who is a teacher, and the doctor said it was TB.”—Male TB patient #1
“When it started it didn’t keep long, and I took medicine, and it stopped. It came again and I took medicine again, and it stopped for the third time. I didn’t know what was wrong with me, so I came to the hospital, and they told me it was TB.”—Male TB patient #2
“I know I cannot get treatment elsewhere that’s why I came to the hospital to get help.”—Female TB patient #2
“There are people who were already aware that I was not well. The way I was complaining of my ribs and chest pain and vomiting after eating, they all knew that there was something wrong with me and advised to come to the hospital.”—Female TB patient #3
- Source of Infection
“I think when I eat with my sister, and she bites the meat in her mouth, and I eat the rest, because she smokes tobacco and cough.”—Female TB patient #5
“I slept outside and at night, I felt cold. You know cough comes with cold so as I slept outside, I got It.”—Male TB patient #3
“I will not blame anybody because it is a sickness that has come, and it is not somebody who put the sickness in me.”—Male TB patient #4
“Nobody gave me the infection. I don’t know where the infection came from, I can’t tell.”—Female TB patient #4
- Duration Before Seeking Hospital Treatment
“I didn’t know that it was serious but within the 11 days, I was having chest pain. My wife said I should come to the hospital because I was also smoking.”—Male TB patient #5
“… I had a cough for more than three weeks and felt pain; I stopped smoking tobacco but still felt pain, so my brother said to come to the clinic.”—Male TB patient #6
“I had chest pain for two weeks, when I cough the right side of my chest was paining. I took tablet paracetamol, but still felt pain. So, I told my son, and we came to the clinic.”—Female TB patient #5
“… first, I felt sick for some time and it stopped, and it came again, by then I went to the southern part of the country to attend a relative’s funeral home at Bolgatanga. When I returned at home it attacked me, and my family brought me to the hospital.”—Female TB patient #6
“As for me, I had cough for ten days, I told my wife and my father…we were staying together, and they are my relatives.”—Male TB patient #7
3.2.2. Theme #2: Attitude towards the TB Patients before and after Diagnosis
- Attitude of Relatives
“When they told me I had TB, my son went back and told our people, and they came only once and never came again. It is now only my son who has been coming.”—Female TB patient #1
“My husband told my sister that she had a long-lasting cough (korsi-kheka), and she was in the hospital; she never came to visit me.”—Female TB patient #2
“No, her attitude has not changed.”—Male TB patient #2
“As for me, my families don’t shun me; my son and my wife come here and visit me.”—Male TB patient #3
- Attitude of Friends
“They neglect us, nobody comes, they know I have a long-lasting cough.”—Female TB patient #3
“After bringing me here to the hospital by my sister, none of my friends come to visit or ask my sister how I am feeling, they know l had korseh kheka (long-lasting cough).”—Female TB patient #5
“My friends come to visit me after I have been in the hospital for one week and brought some oranges.”—Male TB patient #4
- Attitude of Community Members
“It is normal they come to visit me because they are not the people who gave me the sickness.”—Male TB patient #5
“People come to visit me every Saturday and I play card games and they told me not to be worried because in the hospital l would get better.”—Male TB Patient #6
“(Respondent took a deep breath) … As I am here, some of them did not come to visit me. At first, when I was at home, some would not even ask me how I was feeling.”—Female TB patient #6
“I will not get closer to that person because I know TB is something that is contagious and dangerous so if I get close to the person, he/she will infect us with the sickness he/she has gotten.”—Non-TB participant #2
- Community Perception of TB Patients
“I see that person as a human being, as a colleague of us… But the only thing is that I know he or she is a TB patient, he is infected, and I know that he is someone who is sick. And I need to be careful not to be infected by his sickness.”—Non-TB participant #3
“As for me, I will not dislike the person, I will be very careful not to get close to that person because TB is very dangerous you can die.”—Non-TB participant #4
“I mean, I can die; it is serious korseh kheka (long-lasting cough). I will not hate the person but please l will never get near him, it is a bad disease.”—Non-TB participant #5
“What disturbs me most about the TB patients is that we know TB can kill, and you know it is also contagious and we know that as he is in the community, he might infect us. His own life is also at risk, so these are some of the things that disturb me.”—Non-TB participant #6
3.2.3. Theme #3: Social Consequences of Stigma towards TB
“… Because this person (referring to TB patient) is already sick and being in the same house, I would not like to drink from the same cup. We know that as a TB patient you are admitted to the ward for some time and before discharge, I don’t like to be admitted due to getting infection from him/her, and I may die.”—Female non-TB participant #1
“In the same house, there is nothing wrong with that; it is only when you sleep together and the person coughs that you will get it, but if you are in different rooms staying in the same house, there is no problem with that.”—Male non-TB participant #2
“(Respondents shake their heads in sign of disagreement) As we already said because it is contagious, and we have been educated that when the person sneezes, coughs or yawns he is bringing it out, and you are likely to be infected, so I will not be comfortable to sit in a car with a TB patient.”—Female non-TB participant #2
“(Respondents laughed) If my husband has TB, my relationship will be normal because he is my husband, and if I do not stay because of TB, he will divorce me, so we will stay together and we will manage it.”—Female non-TB participant #3
“I felt bad when my people shunned my company, so I will not do that to others, and I will advise the person to come to the hospital for treatment.”—Female TB patient #1
“I don’t feel comfortable. It is not good to stigmatize something like that because you may also be infected one day and if somebody stigmatizes you or avoids you, you will not like it that way; so when you do that to them, it is not the best way.”—Non-TB participant #1
“I should help them for their sickness at least maybe if somebody is staying alone without relatives then you know that this person is in my community, and he is having this condition you can help in his washing of things, bowls and maybe provide him some meals. So, if somebody is having something like that I should be able to help that person.”—Non-TB participant #2
“Stigmatization too won’t help. Stigmatization will rather worsen the case. If we stigmatize them, they may not feel well they will think as if they are not human beings, and we are rather harming them the more and at times when you stigmatize them like that they are not of themselves, and they can die out of the stigma.”—Non-TB participant #3
- Social Effect of TB
- Effect on Marriage
“The one who would be marrying my daughter/son will be scared because I have the TB infection.”—Male TB patient #2
“There will not be any problem because I gave birth to him/her before the sickness.”—Female TB patient #2
“As there is no problem because now we know TB is curable, so he has been cured and there is no problem.”—Female non-TB participant #3
- Effects on Household Income
“I am a security man and as at now I have put somebody at my place to work so it is not affecting anything.”—Male TB patient #3
“No, I don’t think there is going to be a problem in my family, because they will still work at the level that they can, they should also work and change for the better.”—Male TB patient #2
“They said, I should not work, and I am now wondering how I am going to feed the children.”—Female TB patient #4
“As for me, it is hard; I can’t work on the farm and get money and when l go to home, my family cannot help me, and my husband is poor.”—Female TB patient#5
3.2.4. Theme #4: Perceptions about TB Diagnostic Tests and Taking Treatment
“No, when I take the drugs, I have not had any reaction the drugs are good. At first when I eat, I vomit but when I started taking the drugs, I am now okay.”—Female TB patient #5
“Before I had vomited a lot, but when the nurse gave me these drugs in the red box l didn’t vomit as I use to, I take it every day.”—Female TB patient #6
- Voluntary Counseling and Testing of TB
“… Voluntary counseling and testing on TB, yes I will consider it because maybe I am not infected yet, and if they counsel me, they may tell me what to do if I am not infected. They may tell me how to prevent myself or if I am infected, they will tell me where to go, and they will treat me to come out of the TB, so I will consider voluntary counseling and testing because it will help me a lot.”—Non-TB participant #3
“… It also helps you to know your immunity, how strong it is. Maybe you can be harboring it for so many months, and you wouldn’t know you may think it is common cold. So, when you cough there is nothing wrong with you and when you encourage that you will go in for it and it will help you know how your system is moving, and you can also prevent yourself from getting it.”—Non-TB participant #2
4. Discussion
4.1. Perception of Signs and Symptoms Observed by TB Infected Person
4.2. Attitudes towards TB Patients before and after Diagnosis as Being Infected
4.3. Social Consequences of Stigma towards TB
4.4. Perception of Diagnostic Tests and Taking the Drugs
4.5. Study Limitations
5. Conclusions
5.1. Future Research Direction
5.2. Implementation of Research Findings
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Introduces a picture of a TB patient to the group (7 males and 6 females TB patients). |
Moderator: Opinions, knowledge and experience of stigma as a TB Patient? |
1. Disclosure: Whom did you tell about your TB status? Probe after response, 2. How did you find out about your TB status? 3. What did your friends do when you told them that you have TB? Please explain 4. When did you first seek treatment? Please explain 5. How do you feel as a TB patient in your community? 6. Why do you think your wife or husband contracted TB? 7. What were the changes after your wife/husband found that you have TB? 8. What are your worries as a TB patient? Probe after response 9. Who do you blame for your TB infection? 10. Would your wife or husband’s TB condition affect the family daily income? 11. What is your fear of taking the prescribe drugs? 12. Would your son or daughter have any difficulty in getting married in the community? Please explain 13. How do people in the community feel towards you? Is there any more information anyone wants to share with the group? |
General Population FGD (6 persons not infected) |
Moderator: Opinions, Knowledge and experience of persons not infected |
1. How do you feel about TB patients? Probe after response 2. Would you drink from the same cup with a TB Patient? 3. Would you still keep a friend who had just being diagnosed of TB? 4. What are your worries when you see a TB patient? Probe after response 5. Would you live in the same house with a TB patient? 6. Would you allow your brother or sister to marry a person who has been treated for six months for TB? Please explain 7. How would you feel towards your husband or wife who has TB? Probe after response 8. Would you sit beside a TB patient in a car? Please explain? 9. Would you consider Volunteer Counseling and Testing? Probe after response Is there any more information anyone wants to share with the group? |
Meaning Units | Codes | Sub Themes | Themes |
---|---|---|---|
Before I came to the hospital, I vomited when I ate. I also complained of rib and chest pains. So, it was my son who even told me that I was sick and when we came to the hospital, they took radiography and then told me it was TB (female TB patient). | Visit to the hospital, vomiting, rib and chest pain, radiography showed TB. | Vomiting, chest pain, rib pain, chest radiography. | Signs and symptoms observed by TB infected person. |
When it started it didn’t keep long, and I took medicine, and it stopped. It came again and I took medicine again, and it stopped for the third time. I didn’t know what was wrong with me, so I came to the hospital, and they told me it was TB (male TB patient). | Medication stopped for three times, hospital informed TB. | Medication stopped, hospital informed. | Signs and symptoms observed by TB infected person. |
I see that person as a human being, as a colleague of us… But the only thing is that I know he or she is a TB patient, he is infected, and I know that he is someone who is sick. And I need to be careful not to be infected by his sickness (non-TB participant). | Fear of infection, person sick with TB, be careful, avoid infection, not get closer. | Fear of infection Attitudes of friends Relatives and community. | Attitudes towards TB patients before and after diagnosis, as being infected. |
I will not get closer to that person because I know TB is something that is contagious and dangerous so if I get close to the person, he/she will infect us with the sickness he/she has gotten (non-TB participant). | Fear to be infected, TB contagious, dangerous, not get close. | Fear of infection, TB contagious, dangerous, not get close. | Attitudes towards TB patients, fear of being infected. |
(Respondents shake their heads in sign of disagreement) As we already said because it is contagious, and we have been educated that when the person sneezes, coughs or yawns he is bringing it out, and you are likely to be infected, so I will not be comfortable to sit in a car with a TB patient (female non-TB participant). | Knowledge about TB, contagious, infected by sneezing, coughing, yawning, not sit in same car. | Contagious, fear of infection Knowledge about TB. | Social consequences of stigma towards TB. |
Of course yes, it is the matter of staying in different rooms but not divorcing him (female non-TB participant). | Knowledge about TB, contagious, infected by sneezing, coughing, yawning, not sit in same car. | Contagious, fear of infection Knowledge about TB. | Social consequences of stigma towards TB |
No, when I take the drugs, I have not had any reaction the drugs are good. At first when I eat, I vomit but when I started taking the drugs, I am now okay (female TB patient). | Drugs no reaction, feels good with drugs, no vomiting. | No fears No sign of any reaction. | Perception about diagnostic test and taking the drugs. |
Before I vomited a lot, but when the nurse gave me these drugs in the red box l didn’t vomit as I use to, I take it every day (female TB patient). | Drugs no reaction, feels good, no vomiting, red drugs take everyday. | No fears, no sign of any reaction. | Perception about taking the drugs. |
Three Focus Group Discussion and Total participants N = 19 | ||
---|---|---|
Male | Female | |
1st FGD | 0 | 6 |
2nd FGD | 7 | 0 |
3rd FGD | 3 | 3 |
Total | 10 | 9 |
Age (mean) (years) | ||
1st FDG | 35 | |
2nd FDG | 41 | |
3rd FDG | 43 | |
Marital status | N | |
Married | 9 | |
Single | 4 | |
Divorced | 3 | |
Widow | 3 | |
Education | N | |
No education | 4 | |
Primary education (primary 5 level) | 3 | |
Junior High School (8 years of schooling) Senior High School and above (9 years and above) | 8 4 | |
Profession | N | |
Farmer | 11 | |
Trader | 8 | |
Religion | N | |
Traditionalists | 9 | |
Christian | 5 | |
Muslims | 5 |
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Huq, K.A.T.M.E.; Moriyama, M.; Krause, D.; Shirin, H.; Awoonor-Willaims, J.K.; Rahman, M.; Rahman, M.M. Perceptions, Attitudes, Experiences and Opinions of Tuberculosis Associated Stigma: A Qualitative Study of the Perspectives among the Bolgatanga Municipality People of Ghana. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 14998. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192214998
Huq KATME, Moriyama M, Krause D, Shirin H, Awoonor-Willaims JK, Rahman M, Rahman MM. Perceptions, Attitudes, Experiences and Opinions of Tuberculosis Associated Stigma: A Qualitative Study of the Perspectives among the Bolgatanga Municipality People of Ghana. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(22):14998. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192214998
Chicago/Turabian StyleHuq, K. A. T. M. Ehsanul, Michiko Moriyama, David Krause, Habiba Shirin, John Koku Awoonor-Willaims, Mahfuzur Rahman, and Md Moshiur Rahman. 2022. "Perceptions, Attitudes, Experiences and Opinions of Tuberculosis Associated Stigma: A Qualitative Study of the Perspectives among the Bolgatanga Municipality People of Ghana" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 22: 14998. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192214998
APA StyleHuq, K. A. T. M. E., Moriyama, M., Krause, D., Shirin, H., Awoonor-Willaims, J. K., Rahman, M., & Rahman, M. M. (2022). Perceptions, Attitudes, Experiences and Opinions of Tuberculosis Associated Stigma: A Qualitative Study of the Perspectives among the Bolgatanga Municipality People of Ghana. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(22), 14998. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192214998